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TOLtTME IX. 



THE EVENING BULLETIN. 



MAYBTILLE, KT., WBDNESDAT» FBBBUABT IS, 1800. 



NUMBER 6 




POWDER 

Absolutely Pure. 

This powder never vnrteM. A Marvel of pu- 
rity, itrengi band wbdlesomeuMw. Moreeoc- 
n«Niilo«l tbftM tb« ordinary klpda, and eaiiDot 
baaold In competition wltn ita« mnltiindeof 
low tent, shori weight, ainno or phospaie 
BOWderH. Sold only in CRHK. KOYAL BAK- 
XNQ POWOJCR CO., 106 Wall 8U, New York. 



SPARKS 



Closii-OntSale! 



TO QUIT BUSINESS. 



This is a genuine Closing-out 
■ale and no blow. Thousands 
of dollars' worth of 

DRYGOODS, 



Carpets, Oil Cloths, Window 
Shades, Hats, Caps, Hosiery, 
Gloves, Underwear, Table Lin- 
ens, Towelsi Crashes, White 
Ckods, Bte., to b« sold 



CHEAP FOR CASE! 



Eyerything goes at Cost aud 

less. Do not miss this golden 
opportunity to buy goods at less 
prices than you ever did before. 




A VOICE 
Froui the Executive Mansion. 

Mb. a. R. HAWKn— Dear Hlr: Tbe panil- 

Booplo KlH^HeH you f'ui iiislu'd iiie fome time 
slncM KlVf ( xt t'llt iil IsliiiM 1(111. I have test- 
ed ttieui by nHe, uuU uiukI mhv tbey are uu- 
--oalad In elearnaM and bTlllisnry by any 
~t X bar* avar worn. Beapeoiiaiiy , 

JOBV B. QOBSOII, 

OoTaraor ot Oaorgia. 

All ayaa fitted and fit imarantred at the 
BragBforaof POWXR * BBTMOLDH, MayH- 
▼llli^lET. •aU'lylp 



8S 



AJ 



aUV AirO LOCESIOTES, 



Dekijje Rales. 

Th« New Code Disowmd by 
th« HilsmtMrs 6r CoMirMI. 



▲ VOTE TO BE TAKEN IJUOAT. 



OlOeetlaa Vakaa «ka OlawM rtavMtaB 

Th»t One Hundred Member. Con.tltutc 
a Quorum— The Bduoatlonal and Ute 
Oklaboota Bill Dlaeaeeed ta the Seaate. 

Other W»iiliinKton Information. 

Washinuton, Feb. 12.— The journal 
of Monday's proceedinKS woa approved 
by a Toto o( lOQ to 1, the ipeakcir oount- 

iiig a quortim. 

Mr. Cannon c;illi'(l up tho proposed 
code of rulcfi aud oiTerod a resolution 
providing that general debate shall close 
at 1 o'clock to-day and that, after debate 
under the fire tnfaiute rule, the previoiM 
question shall be considered as ordered 
at 4 o'clock to-day. Protests were made 
against cutting off discMission in such 
short order, but without avail, and Mr. 
Cannon demanded the previous ques- 
tion. Many BepuUioav voted against 
the demand and it was rejected by an 
overwhelming voti> - _\ < :ls nay.i 149. 

Mr. Springer- iinniciliatt-ly claimed the 
flo(»r, but Mr. ( annon declined to yield it. 

Mr. Cannon then called for the yeas 
and nays on his demand for the previous 
question. A bulticient number of mem- 
bers failed to arise to enforce this de- 
mand, and amid applause from the Dem- 
ocratic side, the speaker so announced. 

Mr. Cannon then yielded tbe floor to 
Mr. Springer, i-ecognizing, as he said, 
that hi» colleague, Mr. Springer, was iu 
clinrge of the rewolutiona. ( Laughter.) 

The DciiKHTut^ were jubilant over 
their \iciory iind Mr. Springer was 
greeted bv many of his colleagues 
being in <-liarge of tlie new code. 

Mr. Springer ottered a n'solnti.>n which 
was adopted without oiijection, provid- 
ing thai general del)ate shall proceed 
until adjuurnnient, after whicli the code 
shall be considered under the five min- 
ute rule until A o'clock Friday, when the 
previous questloa ihaU \m oonsldMad as 
ordered. 

Mr. t'annon crossed over to the Demo- 
cratic side and congratulated Mr. 
Springer on his soocess. 

Mr. Oroevenor supported the new 
code, and in referring to tiia mle par- 
sUttuig toe neaker to count a qaomm 
b« acuiowleaged that be himself had 
been guilty of preventing legislation on 
manr occasions, aud he was ready t«i 
Btana here and say that he had never 
done it, and prevented the action of tlie 
majority that he had not felt that he 
was guilty of an un justifiable and al- 
most unpardonable liie;u li of duty to 
his couiitituentM. Iu hi.s opinion tlm 
rights of the minority were end.'d when 
it lind expressed its opposition to a meas- 
ure, ha l r<H;orded its \ ot<-s against it and 
had protested to the country. 

Mr. Holman char;icteri/.ed the i>ro- 
postnl code as being a coin|»lete revolu- 
tion in parliamentarv procedure. He 
declared that the clause providing that 
one hundred memliers sliall c(viistitutc> a 
quorum in commitiee of tjie whole 
would place the great appropriation bills 
at the mercy of a handful of the ma- 
jority. He 8]K)ke of various occasions 
upon which the resort to liiibustering 
had been beneliuial to the countrv. anu 
referred with much emphasis to the de- 




this tmic would crown his memory with 
hooors as long as the records of cong^ress 
would survive. 

Mr. Pavfon. of Illinois, defended the 
proiKiticd cole, and argued the neccssits- 
of rules which would give to the nui- 
iority the power to take afBrroative ac- 
tion - 

Mr. Hatch, of Missouri, opposed the 
pro[K),s(Hl change in the system of i)ro- 
cedure of tne house l)< caii>e it wiw a 
partisan move uriginating with .i major- 
ity of Hepul lic.ins wlm hud w hipped the 
minority of tlieir party into the traces 
and compelled tham to approve the pro- 
posed new rules. 

Mr. McAd(X), of New Jersey, antago- 
nised the rules as giving to tlie speaker 
the right to judge the oonsolenoe of a 
member, to impugn his personal honor, 
as weli au to restrict his personal rights. 

Pending furtlier debate the house, in 
accordance with a resoluuon offered by 
Mr. Sprinter, a t tt o'clock adjourned. 

Senate Pr<><-<-e(lin;;s. 

Washinoton, Feb. r.'. -In the senate 
the educational bill w;is further eun-,id- 
ered and the Oklahoma bill was briefly 
diKeiiN .'d, final action not being tiiken 

on ciiher. 

1 )in ing till- niMi ning hour the senate 
passed the senate I. ill ajtpropriating 
til(J(i.(i(Mi f,,r .1 oHhIi'- Inoidin-at Turling- 
ton, Iowa, aud the ^tinale Ijill for the re- 
lief of certain sattlMS on the public 

lands. 

Tiie Oklahoma bill was again taken 
up. the pending nuestion being the 
amendment of Mr. Plumb to include No 

Man's Land in the p-ropoeed territory. 
Mr. Vest made an argiuuent in favor of 
amendment. Mr. Piatt said that Mr. 
Vest's earnestness was due to his desire 
to see tbe Cherokee outlet lying between 
the Oklahoma county and Ko Man's 
Land open to the settlement. He be- 
lieved that tne outlet would be opened 
at the present session of congress, but 
when t!iat was done it would ws time to 
talk of including it and {To Man's Land 
on Oklalioma. 

Ml-. I'.iu-es opposed the nmeinlnient. 
He i)elicved, liov\ e\'i r, I ijat 1 lie i 'herokee 
outlet .^lionM l)(M)pen> d. The ( 'herokees 
L.id hecu threatened with the loiS of 
their l.uid entirely if tliey did not accept 
$).','•"> an a. : e for it. The policy of con- 
demning Indian land, he s.nd. Iiad been 
f niiti ul of e'. i! rcstdt. The sei v ■* ,vry of 
tlie int«rioi had been quoted ii-i .-aying 
that the Cherokoev had no titie a iyway. 

Mr. Jones denied the inttiuuu* ions made 
br thenewspapMiandivpeHied by 3lr. 



mission, and said that the failure of their 
mission was due to men whose interest 
it was that the land should not be sold 
to the govemmant. 

Mr. Piatt said ibat if the Indians took 
the position, backed up by the cattle- 
men, thnt t hey would not sell their lands 
to VIM Unitad Etates at all, then their 
lands should be taken from tham. 

Mr. Tellar supported the amendmant 
because he thought there ought to ba • 
government over No Man's Land. 

Mr. Ingalln opi)osed the amendment. 
To bring widely separated tracts of 
U'rritory under one territorial govern- 
ment would be a wide departure from 
what had heretofore been regarded as 
Hi<> pro) M r f mictions of territorial gov- 
ernnieni . and besides there wn.s no ne- 
cessity f I. r the establishment of a t<'rri- 
torial government over No Man's Tiand. 

The Dill went over without action on 
the amendment. 

The senate then took up the eduoa 
tional bill, and Mr. Blair resumad hi! 
speech in support of the bill. 

Without concluding his ppeech, Mr. 
Blair Yielded to a motion to proceed to 
exaotmva builnsi, and aftar a secret 
session the senate, at 6tl0 p. m., ad- 
jonmed. 

Seaate's Secret Meitnlnn. 

Washinoton, Feb. 18.— The senate 
took up in secret sesstoo tha nomination 
of Thomas J. Morgan, to be Indian com- 
missioner, and oalM^ it for an hour 
and a half without coming to a vote. 
The nomination of Dr. Dorchester, to be 
superintendent of Indian schools, was 
discussed incidentally, as Dr. Dorchester 
and Gen. Morgan were associated in 
some of the charges made agaiust tho 
latter. Senator Jones, of. Arkanaas, took 
the floor lirst and nuuh' a long speech 
aimed at the mdilary lecor 1 ol ( ien. 
Morgan. It was charged lieto-e the 
commisssiontu" on Indian atfairs that Gen. 
Morgan had been court m.-in i.-ili-d and 
dismissed from the arm>', ..nd that lie 
ha<l niahciously caused tlie court mar- 
tialing of a •ubordlnate officer fur cow- 
ardice. 

The coniniiltee on iJidian affairs found 
Oen. Morgan's military record perfectly 
clear, but Mr. Jones rsnawed the charges 
before the full senate and pressed them in 
a Ions speech. Senator Vast, who fol- 
lowed Senator Jones in opposing the 
nomination, paid more attention to the 
charge that Commissioner Morgan and 
Su|)erintendent Dorchester had discrim- 
inated ag;iiii-t Catholics in making re- 
movals and appointments. At the con- 
clusion of Mr. N'est's remarks, tli > senate 
adjourned w ith the imder.^tanding that 
the uommation will be taken up to-day 
and i)ro' a 'ly disposed of. It is cousid- 
eml lik()l\ lliat both Comniissiouer 

Morg m an i ^uiit rmtendent Dorchester 
will oe eoi\|irmeil. Senator I'lnmli, who 
was supMo^eil to be opposed to tlx; men, 
is absi u; from the (it. andjit is said Sen- 
ator Ingalis will make no dutiuct opposi- 
tion. 

Klfctli.ii fontent f'ii«o Dlnpomcri Of. 

WASHlNdTDN, Feb. 12. — The elections 
committee of the house have disposed of 
another contested election oa.se in the 
same manner that it disnuscd of tho 
Smith-Jackson case, which catised the 
long fight in the house. Partv lines were 
drawn in tbe committee when a vote 
was taken at yesterday's meeting. The 
case under consideration was that of 
George W. Atkinson against John O. 
Pendleton, from tha lint district of 
West Virginia. 

When a vote was taken on tha ques- 
tion of making a report to the house, the 
Democrats favored Mr. Pendleton, the 
sitting member, but were overruled by 
the Kepublic.ins, who, by a majoritv 
vote, authorized Mr. Rowell to make a 
favorable report on Mr. Atkinson's 
claim. The DemiKTiitic meniljers of the 
committee gave notice that they would 
submit a minority report which Mr. 
O'Fenall will prepare. 

It was agreed by the committee that 
no atteniiH to bring the case before the 
house should be made until the new rules 
are disposed of. 

Kni'uil«N to th<. KInIr liill. 

^V.\t;lllN(jTo^■, Feb. 12.— The enemies 
of tlie Blair bill in the senate now claim 
to have forty-three votes promised 
agaiust the measure with the three sen- 
ators doubtfuL Forty-one negative 
votes will be bnough to defeat it 

\ Complete Cabinet BteetliiK. 

W.\.smNUTON, Feb. 13.— Secretary's 
Blaine and Tracy attended the cabiuet 
meeting yesterday, and for the hrut 
time in six weeks all the members of tiie 

cabinet were present. 

ShuckinK .Story from North Dakota. 

PortTotten, N. Dak., Feb. 13.— Be- 
tween 800 and 1,000 Indiana credited to 
the Devil's Lake agencv are wliolly des- 
titute of dpUiing and in the last stages 
of starvation. Unless furnished with 
food, clothing and medicine at once 
these Indians will die like dogs. Disease 
has brought fully one-half of them to 
the verge of the grave and the recent 
inclement weather enhaiu-ed their suf- 
ferings. Indian Agent Craiusie has 
issued an appeal for aid. 

Conductors Draw the |.ine. 

St. Joseph, Mo., Feb. 12.— Thfarly- 
two conductors, the entire force of the 
People's street Car company, struck 
Monday. The cause of the grievance 
was th.it the company inst ruried them 
tou.se a new cash fiiro regisier shajied 
like 11 cotlce |K)t. The coni|/any gave 
orders lor i he nu?n to present muz- 
zle of this {^uUar coutrivauce to the 
passenger, who would drop bis nickel 
m the slot. 

Killed on a Crotatnt. 

Cii.\i{i,.vi-Tr., Mich., Feb. r.'. -While 
crossiiigthe Cliii-ago and (iiand Trunk 
r.'dlroad tr.e k in this towi;. w iili a team 
of hoisesaiid wagon, yestcr<lav, Lorenzo 
Stenipl ir. a farint'i-, and ^\■illiam Hay- 
den. I"iih aged about fiO years, were 
stnuk l)\ ;i w. sthoiinil pissengcr train. 
Stemplar was ins.antly killed, and Uay- 
den received serious injuries. 

Ki-ru.'.etl Iu ludlot Snioon K««;jei 4. 
BaNuok "h., Feb. 12. --The grand 
jury of I'e.. ■ jol county, after a week's 
session, lui- lofuved to bring in anjr in- 
dictment agaiiM mloon keepani, 

i 




Adduoed In the Ballot-Box In- 
vestigation. 



MR. H ADDEN FURTHKR CZPLAIN8 



He Says That the Money He Paid Kn* 
Wood Came flrooi Dr. flhwydoa, aa^ Ibif 
Him Taken frum th« Campaign Fund. 
Tha Oomnalttee to Hold a Short Seeret 
ioMlea Before Bsaaalalnf Any Other 

Wltnnv*. 

Washington, Feb. 12.— The Ohio bal- 
lot-box investigating ocMnmitlsa con- 
tinued its examination. Mr. Hadden, 
who was on the stand when the commit- 
tee adjourned yesterday, stated that he 
had paid money to Mrd. WchkI. He had 
received a letter from Mr. Wood to the 
effect that he was hard at work in Wash- 
ington on % !>0,OOO,00O gun contract and 
rc' pie sting hitn to get $100 and give Mrs. 
Wood .^lU of it. Shortly after tliis inci- 
dent .Mrs. Wood and her son called at 
his house and presonted a letter of sim- 
ilar character from Wood, in which was 
inclosed u letter to his wife. This was 
the fir:jt time ha had seen Mrs. Wood. 
He had not the money at the time, and 
reijuci^ted Mrs. Wood to call at his office. 
In the me intime he consulted Dr. Gray- 
don n -spec i in g the matter. The doctor 
a<l vised hiin to advance the money, 
staling that he would be res^iousible for 
the amount. 

Witness tiv^n \xA<.\ of his visit to The 
Commerci;d ( i i/.utt^^ oiHi-e on tln^ night 
fh:it Mr I l.-i!-.'i ad li id been (;onvinccd 
the pijHT Was u torg'TV. Some days 
attiT p:i . ill": I he first amount of nioin'y 
to -Mrs. Wood, the lady ciiUed at his 
house anil told his wile loliavc? liim ciU 
at her hous'-. as she vvanteil tt> see him 
on a very important matter. Ho sup- 
po-ed that this would ba another reouest 
for money, and ha again consulted Dr- 
Graydon as to what was tha best thing 
to do. 

Dr. Gravdon avised him to see Mrs. 
Wood, and if she did not want too much 
money to supply it, and gave him $50. 
The money ne gava tolus.Wood and 
told her not to ask him tor more. He 
did not pav her any mors until Wood 
was arrested, then he gave her son $40. 
This was on tlie night that Mrs. Wood 
and her son came to his house and told 
him that Wood had been arrested. He 
went t<i the dfK)r and there found Mrs. 
W< lod aini 111 r son. They urged him to 
go to the --tat ion liouse immi'diately, as 
WiK)d wanted him. He refused to go, 
on the ground that ho C(juld do no good. 
But Mrs. Wood would not leave the 
house, and told him that Mr. Campbell 
was at the station house and offered to 
get her hushaml out if he would give up 
certain p:v]>ers and say certain things, 
which he did not wish to do. and wanted 
to see him. Hadden, immediately. 

They then left the house but returned 
five minutes later when ha gave the boy 
$40, with the undaistanding that it was 
to ba the last tlms ha was to bs asked 
for money. 

After making this pavment witness 
advised Dr. Graydon oi nis action, and 
tiie doctor refunded the amount paid. 

Witness denied knowing anything 
about money bein? olfered to anyone to 
go on Wood's bond. 

He knew very little about the ballot- 
box bill, he 8. lid. and had never asked 
auv member of tlie legislature to vote 
for it. 

lie was iusked some (juftstions regard- 
ing the testimony given by George 
Cainplieil, and said that there was not a 
word of truth In lha testimcry i^tsb hr 
Campix*!!. 

Mr. Hadden said he had met George 
Campbell since he had been examined 
by the committee, but at the meeting 
not a word had been said in connection 
with tlie investigation. Their conversa- 
tion was in regard to soma flnanoial mat- 
ters which were pending bstwaau them- 
selves. 

In answer to a Question as to {nfona»> 

tion he liad regarding the forged paper, 

he said that he had no intimation that the 
paper was a forgery until it was so pro- 
noiincr^d by The rommercial Gazette. 

Witness denied having any know ledge 
connecting .Messrs. Sherman, Buttor- 
worth ;inil .M<d\inley vt'ith tin haliot-box 
complication. Il(> denie<l having recom- 
mended Mr. Wood for the smoke inspec- 
toi-ship. but said lie liad told Mayor 
Mtwoy that Woo 1 w;us a g<x>d mechanic. 

Mr. Hadden also denied that he did 
this for the purpose of obtaining the 
forged papier frum Wood. The money 
he had paid Mrs. Wood, he said, ho had 
obtained from Dr. Graydon, and he un- 
derstood that he was paying it out of 
the campaign fund. The monav paid 
Wood after the forgery, ho said, was 
paid liim for political purposes, as they 
did not wish to make things itny worse 
in the state than they were! 

Witness denied seeing the ji.iper Wood 
had i)repared until it was shown to him 
by the committee. 

In concluding his testimony, Mr. Had- 
den denied certain statements which he 
had read from the record, to the etfecl 
that he had been engaged in getting up 
a letter to otlsi t the "Topp" letter. 

The cominiltee then adjourned for the 
dav. 

l<efoi-e ad iouriiing the committee <le- 
ciiletl to iiold a shoi l sen t session be- 
fore he_inning the healing again to de- 
cide wlietlK-r or not to call certain other 
witnesses that Governor Forakar and 
others have ask ed to ha ve heard. 

Ii.iil<li'ii'-i T<'st Imoiiy f 'orroborated. 

CINCI.NN.VTI. Feb. l'J.--Mr. lladd(!n's 
testimony was shown to I »r. ( iraydon, 
oflhisciiy. Ho read it through care- 
fully. 

"That is ail true," he said, smiling. 
"There is nothing to dsoj, excuse or ex- 
tenuate." 

"You didn't pav tkls mooay out of 
your own pocket'/' 
**Ne; out of the campidgn funA" 
•«Why wtiH the money paidi" 
, "V^dU, on Oct. S9 mmTNot. 1, 



the money wa.s paid, we were close onto 
the election. There was great fear that 
this fellow would ' captured bv tho 
enemy. We hiul suincientlr learned his 
character to know chat the truth was 
not in him, and we wished to keep 
possession of him till the ballots were 
counted. We believed the Democrats 
were trying to gain his friendship and 
trying to get him to make some sort of 
a confession, so we took care of him. Br 
helpimr him financially he stayed with 
our bias. Hadden and I thought it good 
polittos. We think so still, and tkm 
wa« nothi ng wrong In It whato vwr.'* 

TfU tW OtWAtH O. 

ievevalVaaeenreri injured In a Wreek Stt 
the WleeoBiln Central Ballroad. 

AsHLAXD, Wis., Feb. 12.— Adlsastrow 
accidant occurred yesterday on the Wifh , 
oonsin Central road, near Mellen jun<y 

tion, eighteen miles south of this jilace. 
Particulars are hard to obtain, but it is 
said that six or eight persoiw were in- 
jured, how seriously cuniiot l>e learned 
at this writing. 

The train wrecked was the .Ishland 
and Bessemer express, leaving here at 8 
o'clock every morning over the Central. 

The train was running at the usual 
rate of speed when, without warning 
the express car and two dav coaohea 
wars tnrown from tha track. Thi^ 
bumped on tha ties for an instant mm 
then turned completely over. Theoaas* 
of derailment was spreading of rails. 
Half a dozen passengers had limbt 
broken sod were otherwise injured, but 
none, it is said, fatally. 

An auxiliary left here to bring tbn 
wounded to this phtoo. 

IVeight Wreek Near Altoona, Pa. 

PirrsBtmo, Feb. 12.— A special to Tha 
Times from Altoona, Pa., says: A dis- 
astrous freight wreck occurred iust west 
of this city yesterday evening, demolish- 
ing two large engines ami twidve cars 
of freight. Kngineer William Cover 
iuinned from his engiiu! and broke his 
left leg. Several other employes were 
injured. The wreok was caused bv a 
runaway on the mountain. Trains from 
the east and west were delayed from five 
to six hours. 

BIG FIRE IN GRAND RA FID8, MICH. 

A Brash Coaspaay and VaraUore gaeSe ty 

Sntlrely Destroyed. 

CiiK'Auo, Feb. 12. — A special from 
Grand Rapids, Mich., says: The large 
factory of the Grand Rapids Br dh com> 
pany took tire at 1 o'clock this momln|f, 
and a llerco wind soon swM>t theflamm 
into the worlcs of the Grand Rapids Pu^ 
lor Furniture company, and both wera 
rapidly destroved. 'Tlie establishmenta 
were filled with highly inflamable ma- 
terials, and nothing could have saved 
the buildings. All the engines of the 
city (|uiciily responded to the alarms, 
but the heat was so intense that tiie fire- 
men could not gat witUn fll^tlnf dis- 
tance. . 

Several other large factories in the 
vicinity were threatened, but a slight 
change in the direction of the wmd 
saved them, and the loss was confined to 
the two fact^iries. Large piles of lum- 
ber in the vicinity of the Parlor Furni- 
ture company was eonsumed, and a 
smaller qantity belonging to the Brusk 
oompanv was destroyed. The watol»> 
man at the Brush Company's works wyf 
he first saw the fire near the engtna 
room. It is believed the fire was caused 
by coals falling in, shavings having been 
carelessly left scattered on the ground 
near the'furnace. The loss will be heavy, 
but no figures are now obtainable. Both 
factories are believed to be well covered 
by insunnoa^ 

DESTRUC TIVE LAN D SLIDES. 

Voar People Barte4 la Tholr Wreaked 
KeeMeneo— Oao Ka i MX l«>d. 

CoRNWALLis. Ore., Feb. 18.— The re- 
cent fioods in tlie .lUsea valley cau.sed a 
heavy loss in Benton coimty. The water 
in the Alsea river there wai severad feet 
higher than was ever before known. 
Soma of the moutain slides whiohi moved 
down into the bottom work 500 fssk 
square and so deq> that in some m» 
stancsa large trsss wars carried huB> 
dreds of yuds, and ara now t*fl"'!^Ti£ 
erect. 

In some instances trees wer-^ broken 
off and piled up with earth over fifty 
feet deep, forming a dftm in the ■~*"Hr 

tain streams. 

On Monday morning a large slide came 
down the niountain side burying the res- 
idence of Kohert Uarcliiv and imprison- 
ing him, two children and Itoliert 
Brown, liaiday and his two children 
were extri<ated with difliculty, but 
Brown was killed by the falling tunbsst. 

A I><>uf .Hiite'H Mtritii-f Htnry, 

LlM.\, ( )., Feb. 12. — Vuito a .sensation 
has been created here over the tetiti- 
mony of .1. B. .Show alter, a deaf luute, 
employed at the Standard Oil refinery, 
given at the iiKpieut bi-iug held l>y the 
coroner, showalter said that the morn- 
ing before the explosion, which killed 
one man and injured fire others, he waa 
at work in the still house when a stranga 
man approached him from behind and 
tapped him on the shoulder. He looked 
around itnd the strange man motioned 
for him to follow him. He did so and 
the fellow gave him a note, telling him 
that everything was fixed, and that 
when he gave him the tip to look out. 
Showalter was frightened ai] 1 did no| 
work the next day when tin ( \ plosion 
took place. The strange man he had 
never seen before* and the supposition is 
that t he explosion wjia the worit of soma 
one us reveugu agaiiut the company. 

Stole Oooda la the PrUon. 

jF.FKf.itstiM City, Mo., Fel.. r:. — J. 
Fred. ()■{ loiuiell, a foreman of the ,Je''- 
ferson I ity liuot & Shoe <-oni]iany, at 
the neniteiit iary here, was .•u i fstt-d for 
stealing shoi-s from another inmientiary 
firm. The arrest has mtule a sensation, 
both on account of tlie prominence W 
tlia prisoner and tlie unusual fact of his 
committing theft within the prison 
walls, his peculations having extended 
over a considerable space of time, and 
ttia amount of goods nraovad by hiift 
bsing oonsidarabls^.. 



THE EVENING BUL LETIN 

IMILY, tXCiPT SUMOAr. 

irOMm * MoCAIITHV, 

VvopriatoM. 



HvRRT op that new oitjrchtrter. Over 
half the conHtitutioaal term ot tb« Ltg* 

islatiire has expireil. 



Odb liy« wide awake citiMOS ooald 
11(1 tb« town o«t of Um rats bf 
Offurisinf and goins: to work. 

KiNTacKT must be a good place for 
banks, judging from tba namber of new 
chftrtwi the Lesislatare li aakad to pass. 

Ir that negro who was riddled with 
balleta oat in Indiana a few days ago bad 
met death under similar circnmstanoee 
down South, there would have been an> 
othor *'8oathem outrage" lor lognlli Md 
hit gang to rant aboot. 

Onb can form some idea of the im- 
mense lumber interests of Sonttieaatern 
KentoOky whon ft It ttatod that not 1«m 
than halt a million qtandinf^ treat hart 
botn told and branded in BrMtbltt 
Oonntjr within the lait few montht. 



oua imaflBOM. 



WAHHINOTOV. 

MiM Liu'v Lee Visited M rs. J. Pazton Manb- 

all iHHt wffrk. 

MIM Annie Whitaker la IbS gastt ol Mian 
Matti* Forman, uear bare. 

Mn. AMm Kvana and daMbliw wtn tlM 
gnfltlaof MiM Battle \Arood laM weak. 

M. M. McKnUhl. 



ver>lt7 of VlralnlR 



Spiakbb Ueed says it is hard for the 
Repnblieant to bring a qnoram together, 

because Proviil^nce keeps away from the 
House from six to eii{ht of their member- 
ship of 199. "The Maine statesman has, 
therefore, k ndly iiniler'nkea to supply 
this defect in the arrangements of Provi- 
dence," remarks the Philadelphia Record. 

- - — - - — 

A ePEC'iAL from Frankfurt yester- 
day, said: ■''Mitchell 0. Alford it prom- 
inently B|)oken of at the next State 
Treasurer, although nothing official is 
known up to thit time. J. Stoddard 
Johnston is telling second choice, 
with Ringo, Matt Adams and Ed. Porter 
Thompson in the field. Tbompion will 
be the lucky individual, If any of the 
above are given the potition. 



A coLOKEr) man named Dudley was ap- 
pointed postmaster at Americus, Oa., and 
the citisent, without regard to color or 
party, are protesting vehemently against 
bis confirmation because he it unfit for 
the office. It turnt out Dudley wat a del- 
eiiate totlie Cliic isjo convention and voted 
for Harrison. Protests will likely count 
for nanght with the President in thit case, 
llarriton'i trieodt have to be rewarded. 



To Perpetnate Their Infamy. 

When it r >nie.s to electing a Congress- 
man over iu Ohio 2G,000 Republicans are 
equal to 79,000 Democrats. The gerry- 
mander of that State by the Republicans 
a few years ago was one of the most out- 
rageous in the history of the country. 

The two parties are almont evenly di- 
vided in Ohio, and yet the Republicans 
arranged the Congressional districts in 
auch a manner as to sive the Democrats 
only four or five Representatives out of 
the twenty or more the State is en- 
titled to. 

It was an infamouf proceed in i», on their 
part, and they liave hit upon a scheme 
to perpetuate their infamy. Thit toheme 
is to have Congreffi pass a liiw to prevent 
a re-districting of the State. A bill for 
that pnrpoae hat already been intro- 
duced. 

The Democratic Ltgitlature at Colum- 
boa ean oertainly be relied on, however, 

to attend to the re-districting before Oon- 
^rees can put the hill i)irou(;h. 

♦ ♦ m 

Mr. Vincent's Lecture. 

Editor BuJIetin : We were exceedingly 
glad of tiavin^ the opportunity of tiearing 
thecelehrnted lecturer, Mr. Leon H. Vin- 
cent, last Friday ni};ht, and desire to ex- 
press our K^iititude to Miss Gordon for 
securing his services. We think we are 
aafe in saying that all who heard the lec- 
ture feel Indebted to her for that pleasure. 

Pupiui or Hioa School. 

Don't Lat it Eicape, it Mtf b« Tonr 

Turn. 

With well-known reiiularity the 23G h 
}>rau(l monthly drawing of the i^ouinana 
State Lottery took place at New Orleans 
on January 14, Is'Ji), under the usual su- 
pervision of Gunerals G. T. I3eauregard, 
of Louisiana, and Jubal A. Early, of Vir- 
ginia. Ticket Ko. 03,262 drew the first 
capital prize of $300,000. Ticket No. 
12,122 drew the second capital prize of 
■JIOO.OOO, and was sold in fractional twen- 
tieths at $1 each, sent to M. A. Daupliin, 
Kew Orleans, La. One was held by Eli 
iiane, Philadelphia., Pn ; one hy Robert 
T. I'arker, !St. Janien, .Mo.; one by Thop. 
Marriott, Leavenworth, Kan.; one hy 
John J. Conley, Boston, Mass.; one hy 
HauH I^agoni, Dwiirht, III ; one hy H. W. 
Carter, Minueipolin, Minn , one by C. N. 
Duress, Detroit, Mich.; one by Nevada 
National Bank, San Francisco, Oal; one 
by Se(;ond National Bank of Jackton, 
Tenn., etc., etc. Ticket No. 64,301 drew 
the third capital prize of |5(),00(), also 
sold in fractional inrtfl, in like manner at 
$1 each : one to Wm. K. Weatlake, Peoria, 
111.; one. to Jacob Abbott, 4.35 Aisquith 
street, Baltimore, Md.; one to Henry 
Ottke, lu3 West Tiiird street, Cincinnati, 
O.; one to a depositor. Union National 
Bank, New Orleans, La.; one to Hannah 
Lav &. Co., Traverse City, Mich.; one to 
John Daly, 462 Waabington ttreet. New 
York Oit/ ; one to Oharlet O. Lynch, 
Bogton, Mast., tte., ata. Tha next draw- 
will take place Tneeday, March lltb, of 
which all information will be furnished 
on application to M. A. Dauphin, New 



a gntdaate of tbe VnU 
op4>Rad soBOol here tbts 

week with g()oa prospccin. 

MK'RM Alma KUKoti, ol Rpctorvllle, and 
Pink Jor ian, of rolTer<ix>r(), nre vlHlllag Mrn. 
Charloa W. Forman, In the nelKhborhood. 

Tbe Dnrreit famllj are la ezpectatloa ot re- 
eeivinf a laigs sam ot moner asoa Aroas the 
■ale of valnaDM mottntaln iaads. In wliKb 

they hold large Intereata. 

Tbe oommoD yellow ilowen, foaad In al- 
moat every garden, bloomed tafly>tiro day* 
earlier IIiIh fwaaoii than laHt HeatMi MM flfty* 
■Iz dayi earlier than In 1888. 

It was a slngolar coincidence that tbe late 
Dr. Robert M. Taylor staoaid have been en* 
gaged In prepariog a treattae on the verjr dla- 
eaae (peniODltIs) whleh eanaed his death. 

E. Taylor baa patented an iDgenlooa con- 
trivance which looks as though It would rev- 
oluiioDlae tbe preaeataystem of road-lMda for 
railway^ and do awar a U ofsl J is r with wood 
iieawhlflb now make raliRMMlng to haaanl* 
on» by roltlLg, Ac. 

Mr. John Lamb used to tell a good atory on 
one of the BropliyH, hts neighbor. Hrophy 
wan on IiIh WHy home prettv drunk and con- 
cluded to tap the Jug again. Mr. Lamb waa 
near by, but waa not seen by Brophy when 
he dlHmouaied to drink. In geltuig od blK 
horse tbe sack with the jug came ofT a so, and 
Rtrikiosc the pike hrnko. Krophy taking In the 
sitnatlon at a glance, and .seeing h« could not 
do tbe aubleot Jnstlue, atralgiited himself up 
and hlaaedoot: "I dare thedlvll hiuiaelt to 
oome out and box a roaua wid me." 

OBBMAMIOWll. 

La grlppo still Itafsfs wltb ns. 

Mq obante In oar P. M. at yet, thongb both 
partlee are bopeftil. 

K. r> Rlllott, an a Rign painter, Is bard to 
beat, .^l e Winter's new sign. 

Mr. J. ,j. WllUama, who has been quite 111, 
l.s, we aie glud to say. Improving. 

Uermantown has two dramatto oluba and 
both will (ivo eBtartalomsoia la ttae near 

futuie. 

Tbe Oermaniown Obeas Cinb bas etaal- 
ieiiged the firookaville einb lor a aeries ol 

Qunrlerly nioctinK of Wif M. K. Chmvli is Iu 
pronrf'KN. Thf I'rHsldln^ Klikr, Kl'V. Hoil.ig, 
Is conductliig It. 

Mr. P. BuUlugton and family and A. V. 
Htilea and tomliy will mova to Dajrtoo, O , 
Home time In March. 

Quite an IntereKting trial will take place 
ht-if Huturday and a Itirae orowil will uI k'iuI, 
a.s there proitiUes to be" much inn ahead." 

A. P. Stilts si-)UI his house at pulillc sale last 
Baturduy. The puirliasci.s win- Miss Kiiitna 
UordoD and W. o. Ulinnuit. I'llcv p il l. Srrn 

In my notice of Prof. Tliomax' hcIiogI en- 
tartalnment, 1 omitted, nniniuntlonally, the 
name of MlsaVlnnle Writ:ht. who wan one of 
the i)eKt perform ers, aud (lenerveH great pralH^. 

We Would like to have thedatesof the Ml. 
Olivet 'lius liiii se'sngi'. 'I'lial line liusu't l)eei) 
III PXl.N,<»n"e that liii!:;. Hu' |niliiips he 
doesn't mean as a 'bua horse, but an a huruei-s 
horae. We oau go blm two years belter than 
that, If be doea. i:hio. 

HELENA. 

Mias Florenoa Tolle, of MayavUIe, la visit* 
Ing ttae family ot Uampbell King. 

Jasper Calvert visited In Angosta Snnday 
and Monday. 

Bi noe Harmon visited la Flenlng this week. 

Robert a. Wood I* on the alok list 

Robert Oook and wir<' are visiting In Mays* 
vliie. 

SHANNON. 

Born, 'n the wife of full Hltt, Friday, Feb- 
ruary 71 h, a Hue boy. 

The r<'iiinlns fif .Mrs. Abrahani Tuell were 
barUd hi Hhnnnon cemeleiy, alu r a funeral 
sermon hy Rev. .lolly mi H:ilui(la> l^sl. 

Tariff Reform in New England. 

[Albany Argus.] 
The fact is established that New £n- 
irland is in favor of tariff reform to a de- 
eree that breaks through all party lines. 
In a little over a year after tbe Republi- 
can party won what ifl called a decisive 
victory over tarill' reform, ami iifter the 
loyiil orK'Hiis had declared tarifF reform 
buried unt nf siabl forever, it rises up in 
the Republican House of Kepres* ntatives 
and in Republican New England in a 
more formidable shape than ever. Thit 
time it bas a host of Repnblicana to sup- 
port it, not only in New England, but 
also in Ohio and Iowa, tboae ttrongbolds 
of the war tariff and monopoly protec- 
tion. The puny efforts of a few rabid 
protectionists like McKinley,R«fed & Co., 
will have as niii(d) effect upon the pop- 
ular movement in favor of tariff reform, 
as tbe worthy Mrn. Parti nf^ton'a brootB 
had on tbe Atlantic ocean. 

Fashion Notes. 

[New York Bun.] 
Plaid ribbons are in fashionable favor 
Even popliuscome in fancy plaids and 

clan tartans. 
Sarah tllk will be restored to favor for 

tpriog toilets. 

The fancy tartant come in dlks for 

visiting (towns. 

Plaid.M ortartan.s tirobeing alreadymtdo 
up on tbe bias for sprinti suits. 

Tartant are combined admirably wltb 

velveteen in children's Hjirir' : garments. 

The new nun's veilint'.s cdd h with bor- 
ders and sometimes fringes on one selvage. 

The combination of white and yellow, 
or white and gold, is mnob favored for 

evening drees. 

A Vandvlted border on one selvage, 
fininhed with a fringe. It a novolty in 
fancy nun's veilin)<H. 

Notice. 

The books of the Limentone Bnilding 
Association will beclo^ed for the transfer 
of ttnck from Febrnary 11, 1890, toMarch 
3,1890. 

Rucklon's Arnica Salvo. 
The be.st salvo in the world for cuts, 
brui.scH, Hores, ulcera, salt rheum, lever 
8ore8, tetter, chapjied hands, chilblains, 
corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi- 
tively cures piles, or no pay required. It 
is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, 
or money refunded. Frioe 26 oents par 
box. For lala by J. James Wood. 



4o I'Iniinil .Shirt for llltn. 
A LBWi.->toii little boy deolai'cd a pliilo- 
aoplllc iliiioiiendeMco and aeci'iited the eou- 
seqnenres iu so niiitior of fact a way lust 
week that it may timlvc a story, even If it la 
not 80 very funny. His motber dressed hlin 
up iu a new tlunnel shirt and sent him to 
■cbooL Tbe shirt IrrlUted his cuticle, or. In 
other words, he itched. MThea he oame home 
that night be was oroMH-aad very croai for 
10 small a boy-«nd be dedared ha and the 
shirt bad parted company forever. Tbe 
next morning, as his mother prepared to 
dress bini for school, tbe boy drew the line 
at the shirt. "No," said he, "I dont wanter 
wear tlifU shirt." A brief debate enaued, la 
whii'li the boy ikpiMare<i to have formed his 
opinion aiiil ^> have decided to stick to It. 
The question when put to the house was 

carried by the boy. win wooU not doa tha 

shirt. 

"If you wUl not wear it, " said UsBMlllMr, 
I shall send you back to bed." 

Back to bed be went. He got no dinner. 
AftaniOOB oame. A neighbor went in to sew 
blm— hts mother telling her that abe had a 
bad boy apstalra. Tbe boy lay there In bed 
wida awake, his little eh sel a flushed with the 
sitnatioB, bat showing BO signs o( change «t 
heart. 

"Don't you want to go to sebooir askid 

the nei(fhlHir. 
"KchooU" waa the reply; **I shall never go 

to RchiM)! at;.uii." 
"Don't you wnnt tof 

"Y»>s; but I ean't. IVe got to sluy hei e." 
"All your life,'" 

"Yes'ni," was the roply; "(ill my life. 1 
shan't ever p>t nji u'j;niii, proli'ly." 

What could a Jiiotln'i '.s iieart do ug.'iinst so 
philosophic un ULvept.iiice of liie terininutiou 
of a life career aa tbisf What but kisi« him 
at tea time and go and buy the little hunch 
of iduclc some downy little undenthirta that 
should never tickle him.— Lewistou Journal 



I-OM)MN, Feb. li. — The Hrilisll lin-.no 
of pal li.iii.riit r('a.s.scinoled vi i.'i liy. 
Tlie »juteii s .siieech opeuin^ the sesoiou 
waa read by the lord nigh cliauceliur. 

PRIC E8~fcUR RENT. 

Review of the Money, Stock and Cattle 
Quotations for Feb. It. 

Money on call loaned nt ikcH i iior cent. 
Currency sizes, 116 bid; louiti o^upim, tii 
lid; (onr-and-a-halfa, do 104>j' bi 1. 

Thu stock market this moriJu^ was cx 
truincly dull aud prices aa a rule nuctunted 
witli a V •!• fuTow ranfre. In tho Urxt hour 
pi'i W. I C! ; •iicrally strong and advaiict"! 
witli 'au little iincrrupTii)u tlirn.iirlioiit tin* 
Imur. I'rui.'iat 11 <yidi)ck w( ro ^ 's pT 
ccut. liij^li'T than they closed 1 isr ni.; it. i Iv,. 
lattur 111 Su;.(ar Trust>. llocK Islu^i.l, I'olo- 
rad . Co il au.l li IfW uILkts .v.-ivtiju most 
activu sUicks. .\ftiT 1 1 o'clock t h'j ni ii k -t 
Ma.-" ii.it a. tivo uiid there w.is Uws stn'ii;;tli 
to pri'Ts, wluoii ;ir.idu;illy dacliuvd to noon. 
At t hat hour values bad lost akU of the early 
imurovouieut. At this writing the market 
is dull at the bottom figures. 

Atchison Mich. Cent .... M' 

C, B. & Q . . . .107^1 N. Y. Central. . 107 

C, C, C. & I... Northwestern.. llOJi' 
Del. & Hudson.. l.'>0% Ohio & Miss... tl'iV 

D. , L. ft W i;l7 Pacific Mail .... SSjJ 

Erie ^"Vf Hock Island. .. . 93>2 

Lake Shore lOi n i^t. Paul 

L.ftN. 68';} i AVtMtertt Union. 

CiuoiunatU 

■\Vhkat— 74(379c 

Wool — L'iiwit.>,ht!d fine nuTino, I'-y/l'Jc; 

blood combing, 23^°<Mc; uittdiiiiu Uulaiuo 
and clothing, :M<a>25c; braid, 18@d0c: me- 
dium combing, 34c<£28c: fleece washed, fine 
uicriiio, X ioul XX, Si8<330c; medilun clotb- 
iii^. oiha,:iW; delaine, V><g31c. 

Hay - Choice timotl^ sells at f il.SO<ai8.00 
l>cr ton: prairie brings 10.00(88.50; straw, 
.j;,>.oOvi'i.'iO. 

Cattlk — Uood to choice butrh^is, ii.'?,r,.5 
@4.1.v; iHir $2.75((z;5..')0; ronxiiioii tl.T.'jdi 
'<i.'..'.>; stdckiTs and feeders, | J .»o,,, | (»o. 

ilous — ^S«•l(■cted butchers and lu-avv ship- 
pings, $4.1.'i((j(4.'J5; fair to go^nl puckiug, 
t4.1()%l. 1.5; common and rough pucking, 
t8.75(^L(X); fair to good light, «4lo^8D; 
pigs, |3.«0(ji(4.15. 

Bhbbf— g8.00a5.78. 

LAiaa-t4.003«.60. 

nttsbarg. 

Cattlb— Prims, KM^OO; good, 
4.30; fair, $8.20(it&flB: bolls, ttSiil and tat 

IIoos -Ail gradsa, HM«i.»i few extra 

selling ut, $4.40. 

Shkei' -Extra, $5.00i^.'i.80; good, $5.30® 
5.60jjair to good, •4.75«i5.^; common, tii.00 



Ohioago. 

Hoot— Light, lt.86^4.05; mixed, $3,800 
4.00; heavy, $3.85^oa 

Cattle— Extra beeves, (4 7005.30; steers, 
$3.50@4.tr>; mixed. $1.25^00; stookers and 

feederb, $:i.lio(($J.50. 
BBKlU>--$;i.SU(S5.8S. 

Lambs— 15.00® <5.&5. 

N«w York. 
Whbai -No. i rod winter, 8a>^c; March, 



c. 
Corn 
Oats- 



-Mixcd, oTV/a 

-No. mixed, 28)^0; March, 28>ic 



FOK BENT. 



FOR RENT— Honae of five rooni.s and 
kitcheu. Apply to this office or to WM- 
LAL.LKY. dll 



Merit Wing. 

We deaire to eay to o ir citizens, tliat 
for years we have l)eonfitdling Dr. King's 
New Disrovery for consumption. Dr. 
King's New I..ife Tills, Bucklen's Arnica 
Salve and Electric Bitters, and have 
never handled remedies that tell aa well, 
or that have given auch nnlTaiwl latit- 
(actlon. We do not betitate to gaarantee 
them every time, and we etand ready to 
refund the purchate price, if satitfaotory 
retnlts do not follow their nse. These 
remedies have won their gr^at popolar- 
itv parelyoa their merits. J. Jamet 



won MALE. 



FOR SALE— A New Home sewing niuchlue 
— Hpcond hand. In thorooKh repair. Dull 
on KATIK OHBORNK.fU F. Il.Traxe l'w. tl3 

|}t<J^t i^ALK— The suburban residence of Mrn. 
r FannleTabb, on KleiuinK pike, JUHtattbe 
city lliult. Large lot, trult, water, tine view, 
no c.ty taxes. Will be aoldobsap. Can be 
oirrli d 111 hulldInK aM>^oclatlon. Apply to G, 
W. HUl.HKK, Court siroet. tl2 

,M)K HALK-Buslnei-bWhtah iHlud stveial 
ynHVN Hud baa always paid well. Good 

M<ays« 
7dm 



F 

rea 

vllle, Ky. 



Iwaya pa 

reasons for selling. A Ja r sss , £osl71, Moj 



FUR HALiU— A valuaitle pice ol property on 
Urant street. Knqulre nf PiCABClC <» 



_ street. Knqulre nf 

DULEY at Stale National Bank. 



tf 



FOR BALE OR RKNT-Mlas Parke'sdwell- 
_ tnion Limestone street. 



JUOD. 



LOST. 



T oar— Saturday night, on Market, Second, 
JLi Button or Front &tro«ts.a gent's scart-pio. 
Finder will return to IfarabalBefllu, or this 
omos and receive reward. 



10-8t 



rovjm. 



SOUND— An orange and white pointer 
wltb nlckle-plaled collar lined wltb 
tlKT. Owner can liavpnanmhy rulllnKon 
.■\ 'I' mill [my I .'X flS 



JOHN i'. 



INCOMPt tEHE NSIBLE. 

Why yon will exohanie your old sewing 
machine and pay a difference of $40 or $60 
when you can nave It repaired and made aa 
good as uewT Ail kinds repaired and war- 
ranted. Twenty-five years experleoca Or- 
ders left at Owens, Mltobell A Oo.'s hardware 
-to., wttl to-jj.jg^^;gj|t^^,^^ 



^ABTISTIC><' 

We are displaying the handsomest, most stylish, best 
fitting, best wearing and by far t|^e cheapest linet of 

Ladies' Fine Footwear 

broni^ttoaieOityofMaysTille. Wthmjutt 
reoeived ftwh inroioes of the very ne«reit styles, *nd 
are offering these goods at unapproachable prices. Our 
styles are all new and confined to us. Ladies, call and 



see them. 



H. C. BAB.KLEY. 

THE SPOT CASH SHOE STORE! 



C LOAK S! 

Owiiiff to till' wry iiiiscnsonaMe wcatlior, and liav- 
Uiti too many I'loaii.s, w«' liave r<><lucod «'v«'i'.v ysjriiient 
to a |>i'i('4> lliat will s^'ll tliein (|iii<*l(I.v. Tlioreare niiiiiy 
c'l4'};aiit uud very Htyli8li guruieiits iu tlic l ot. T licy 
lia\ (> all been marked* not at cost, Irat WAT UNDEB 
COST. 

MS 00 8BAL PLUSH SACQT7B8 $14 80 

12 00 SBAL PLUSH JA0KBT8 7 00 

10 00 NEWMABKET8 5 00 

All onr finest Newmarkets, some worth $20 an<l $25, 
take yonr choice for $tO. The $."> and .$7 on<-s now- 
marked dowu to $2.80. Lrfidies' Juelicts aud Chil- 
dren'* Cloaks at prioea tmly snrprlainv. 

(WE WILL NaT REFUSE A REASONABLE SFFER^ 
FOR ANY CLOAK IN OUR HOUSE! J 

A F«MV 3f()r«' Ti'lllny: Prlcos : Lonsdah^ 4-4 ISlcach- 
od Muslin, 7 l-lic. a yard; heavy, yar<l-widc 81ie(>tiii;; 
and Kood Canton Flannel, a yard ; all of our be.st 
Prints, ffc. a yard; 10-4 White Blankets, 00c. a pair ; 
grood Comforts, 80c. each. 

THE BEE Hi¥E, 

B08SNAU BB08.» PROPS. 



SIXTY THOUSAND BOLTS OF WALL PAPER OUR 



Last Pebruaiy we made a ran on oar atook wbleta not ouly relieved na of lots 
of tooda bat (are oar oaatamera aome rar* bargnloa; and now, in ordar to re- 
dace >too)E, wa will do llkewtie, and ofler oar atook of PIOTUBlfli. FBAMRb, 
BETH OF BOOKS. BOX PAPiCBS, *e.. at a great redaction, in order to set raady 

to bandle our Immense 8lorlc of 

WALL PAPERS, 

of which we have already reoelved 90,000 bolts. We are going to be able to show 
aa nice a variety, aa large an aaaortaitnt, with prtoea aa low es ean be bad any. 
wbera. Yoa will flad oaaap teigataa in oar storey mat JMd in plain flgoraa at all 
tiaaaa. OorlSaaBtOlotbBeokaatlllaiaataabltaanaatlon. 

KAOKklY * M'DOUOl.1. 



■-H 

M 



FOR FINE WATCHESi DIAMONDSj JEWELRY 

Btlverware, Oloeke, BpeotaoleB, Etc., go to yonr old Reliable Jeweler, 

HERMANN UN GE. 17 Arcade, Cin. 0. 

-^An Elegant^ 
-^Solitaire ■ Diamond » Oombinatlon * Rlng>- 
Lace Pin. Stud and Bracelet 

Will be iircsented to Home customer of J. UAI^IjI^NGEU, the Jew- 
eler, on February 1, 1800 — one ticket for every dollar's worth of 
fCOMls bouKht. 

Bargains For Fifteen Days! 

To close out manufacturer's conslfirnment of Tapestry^Felt and Jap- 
anese Table Covers and Scarfs.Turcois Curtains and SumtelLiambre- 
qulns. Hold Fast Heartlt and Door Ruirs, Ai^han Sbawli And SMdu. 
Union Bed Spreads, Cloaks without reserve. 

i J. HcDOUeLE & SOH, 

Old Postofflce Building, Sutton Street. 



THE HOTEL EASTMAN, 

NOT •PlllllOt, AUK. 

The largeat and flneet RESORT HOTIL in 
America, wltb tbe flneet bath boueee in tbe 

world connected, will open (under manage- 
ment of (). O. Harron, of While MounialD Ho« 
tela) for seaaon of IHM, January lOtb. Tloketa 



REMOVAL 



THE EVENING BULLETIN 



'Mdt l HAVB IS OOn.' 



OA/Lt. EXCEPT SUNDAY. 

IIOMIR A MoOARTHY, 

Propriaton. 



WBDNB8DAY, FfiBBUABY 12, 180a 



bahjBoad sohedvliE* 



ODmaWAVi vnrisioii mwrnATm^xm amd ohio. 



Dm Bait. 
HOi ............12:16 a. m. 

Ko. S 1U:(W a. m. 

No. 12 i:V\ p. m. 

Ko. 4 S:25 p. m. 

Hoi. tl and 88 ara nlscd tmii%NM. 11 and 

m. If I 

jtOD, Rail t morn ant 
omtorl Azprieiw, ai 
V. Alt dally except Nna. 11 and IS. 



Dv» West. 

No. 81 4:iria.ni. 

No. 1 6:57 a. m. 

No. II H-m a. m. 

No. 8 „ a:U) p. m. 



IS ttaf Ironton areommodatlon. 
MaWaalllngtOD, Ralltmoroand P 
OM jp^nt Oomtorl <«zprieiiw, and Moa. 8 and 4 



o*. 1 and a 

MblngtOD, Ralltmoroand NewYork and 



DUMt eonnaotlon at central dapott Cla«la- 
B«u, tat all polnU West and Baaio. 



KATin&UBrfmMi kmtuukt 

AiriTaa...>.«M...w«M.M 10:26 a> nu tslOB^ 

0«part......M.. 5:16 a. m. liSO ^. ak 

All tralnH dally exrepi Himday. 

A(M ! wt'iity-Hl X 111 imilf.H to Kill dly I Imp. 



Imdications — Colder, /air weather; vari- 
aiU wM»i gmurtHif i wr O wM fcrf y; cold 

wave. 

"MomnAiv Boy." 



Canmid barriM, 8 lor 85 onta, ai Oal- 

boun'a. 

Lknt will commence tbe 19ih of this 
nooth and oontinae until April 26. 

Fabiom »im1 tobaoeo dMlcrt, Dal«7 ft 
Baldwin liMor*tobMooaadtobaooob«rpi. 



Corn Wanted.— Five thousand bush- 
all sou d< I wliil ' corn, nt Old Gold Millf. 

Mn. Dr. M. H. Davis, of Mayslick, is 
•pandiog the waelt with Mr. and Mrs. L. 
W. Qalbr atth. 

'Mian MdIHh CarpenttT, of Paris, who 
had been viaitiog lelatives at Taokahoe, 
retaraed home yaatarday. 

Mit.0. D. Shipabd and wife have sold a 

house and lot on drxnt Btreat to Mr. 

Horatio Ficklin for $1,480. 

VV.M. V. U AUG HEY and wife have sold 
their interest in the late Aaron I. Sid- 
wdU'a real estate to John B; Sidwell for 

fTS.TS. _ 

Mas. TuoMAS QiB JBNB, who has been 
ill for several days at the home of her sis- 
ter, Mrs. Martin, on Forest Avenne, is 

improving^ 

Thomas Lashbbookb has resigned as 
overseer of road in district No. 3, precinct 
No. 8, and James A. Oartla was ap- 
pointed in his stead. 

BlMOOOLD LoDQB No. 27, I. 0. 0. F., 
will have work in the initiatory deeree 
to-night. Members of DuK.ilb an<l Char- 
ter Oak lodges are invited to be present. 



MB3SBS. Peabcb and Wadswortb are 
having the old Maddoz building on the 
east side of Wall street, near Front, re- 
paired and improved. A new front wall 
is being put in. 

OvbT a few days more remain to bay 

gOMls and becare tickets on the elegant 
diamonds Hopper & Murphy give away 
Haioh 1st, 1890. This drawing will posit- 
<Mi!ylaiepIaMon datenaiiiid. dtf 

Ballknuer, the jeweler, has postponed 
the rulile of that ?400 diamond unt 1 
March 8th. In the meantime be will give 
a ticket with every dollar paid on account 
and on every dollar'B worth of goods 
bought. 

Mbrchants and farmers will find a very 
large stock of chains and hames at Frank 
Owens Hardware Co.'s. The firm advise 
early purchases. Hardware and iron have 
been advancing in price since they made 
thair orders for saoh goods. 

Mils. Noah Piiki.ton, whoso home 18 
near the old Slack P. O.,6old 1,040 pounds 
of batter last year, and in addition made 
a large quantity that was used by the 
family. This beats tbe record of Mre. 
W. B. Thomas several hondred poands. 

W. B. Olbvblabd'b Oonsolidsted Min- 

Btrela will be at the opera hoiiBe.Wednes- 
day, Feb. 19ib. Seats now on sile at 
Taylor's. Parties from a distanoe desir* 
ing tickets can write to raanajjers and 
have them reserved. Watch for adver- 
tlsamapt 

Thb Bourbon News says: "A rather 

ludicroiiii incident happened during the 
performance of "Buffalo Bill's Last Shot," 
at the opera boose Saturday nlgbt At 
the close of thesecoml act, when Buffalo 
Bill was standing over the seventh victim 
of his revenge, making a tableaux, the 
curtain refused to come down, the scenery 
would not slide, and the " victim " got 
«p and walked off the stage with his 
•Inyer, amidst the npcoariooi appkraM of 
tha audience." 

Death of Mrs.'peter MaUoy. 

The death of Mn. Palar MaMoy oocnr- 
red yesterday at her home near German- 
town. The funeral will take place 
Thursday morning alSo'cIoek, lha ra- 
mains being taken to Wasbiai|l0B bf tha 
way of MaysviUe. 

Tha daoeasad waa about sfatyflva 
years of age. She had been in declining 
health for some time, and a aevere attack 
of b grippe soon pravad fstal. 

Her husband and several children sur- 
vive her, among them Dr. Pat Mailoy of 
Lixiagl9BaBd Dr. Jalm Mailoy of Oev^ 
tagton. 



Particulars of th« Suicide of J. J. 
MeOnrfhaj al Saa«ai Otif 
Lait Snndajr. 



Mention was made Monday of the rui- 
cide of J. J. McCarthey at Kanaas (Jity 
last Sunday. The Jonroal, of that city, 
in Kivinn tlie particniara of the sad 
afldir saya : " The deceased had been in 
Kansas City only ihraa weeks, during 
which time he bad been out of employ- 
ment and in poor health. Prior to his 
arrival he had lived in Joplin, Mo., and 
was employed as traveling salesman by 
tha Oale Harrow Oompaay. He bad 
known Edwin Day, who rooms in the 
boose where he committed suicide, while 
thayboth resided In Mayaville. When 
he came to Kansas City he hunted up 
Day and took a room in tbe (same house. 

" Shortly before noon Sunday MoOai- 
they left his room in the third story of 
the building occupied by J. F. McCul- 
loeb and B. F. Martin, both of whom 
were visitiiix the occupant of another 
room at the time. Closing tbe duor he 
laid down upon the bed, placed a revol- 
ver against his left breast and pulled the 
trigger. The shot was heard by several 
young men who were in rooms on the 
third floor. They ran into the room in 
which McCarthy was and found biin 
lying on the bed with a bnllet wonnd 
just above his heart. He was then dying. 
The weapon was upon the flojr near the 
foot of the bed. It belonged to J. F. Mc- 
Culioch. 

"Several letters which be had written 
after he determined to pot an end to his 
earthly exis'ence were found in Mc- 
Cartliey's pockets and trunk. The fol- 
lowing letter waa addressed to bis father, 
A. K. MoCarthey, MaysviUe, Ky : 

"Kahsas City, Mo. 

'This is what I want done. I want to 
be taken to MaysviUe, Ky., where my 
first wife is buried. Ddar father, send for 
Kate and the children. When you get 
me home please fake me home to Mays- 
ville, Ky., and bnry me with my dear 
wife. I have lived long enoU){b, so good 
by to all of my friends. Qoi blees my 
children. lam a mined man, so good by 
to all. 'J.J. McCABTnsY.' 

"Tha following waa not addressed |to 
any one or ^i^ufvl : 

'Pa will p.ty you all. Owe Ud. Day 
and owe him since July $1.50. Oood*bye 
to all. I can't stjnd this any longer. All 
I have is gone. Pat this picture with 
me. Ood bless her. I hope I will mnet 
hor.' 

"McCarthey bad been married three 
times. His first wife died several yean 
ago. His second wife obtained a divorce 
from him two years ago and bis third 
wife died in Joplin three montha ago. 
Several photographs, among which was 
one of his last wife, were found in his 
trunk. No money waa found upon hia 
person or among his afTaots." 



^TWO SPLENDID BARGAINS 



Ladies' Berlin Kid Button, 



Goodyear Welt, OiM-ni, Common Sense ) 
and Wiiukt'iifa.Ht luMts; sixeaS 

to*> ; HidtliN I) and 10. ) 



$2 



o 
oe 



u 

O 



Ladies' Straiglit Goat Button, [IJ^^S'S'^1$2 

•Srrbeae tee good* aenaible and aeaaonable Shoea, and BBMABKABLiY CHBAP.'W 



AdwarUsad Latter Ltat. 

The following is a list of letters remain- 
ing in tbe postoffice at Mayaville, Maaon 
County, Ky., for tha weak aadiag Taae> 
day, February 11, 1890: 
Baaknni, Henry i Jared, W. V. 



HlHnd, .Mr*. Annie 
KuriiH, Mlaa Ifirlner C. 
Burt, Henry 
Banka, Mollle 

Boyd. Allle (Rol. ) 
Berry, Mm. T.Mu 
Bleven.v, Jhiih'h 
Baamauu, Mre. Cor' 
data 



Joiien, .1. .\ . 
I Jhiii <noii, Julia 
lohniou, Travla 
I Leo, Mn. Mattia 
I Lyainn. Jdmas 
LuiiiHii. kit'H. Bmna 
i.HijH LiiuiHay 
LiUiuau, U. >VI. ■ 
Mulilu. J. A. 



Bmwnaoomh, Charllel Malian, Brian 



Mfirn 8, Ii'c-iiH O. 
Hi'HZ ir, .A Dim u. 
Brown, HuiMuo 
B nka. Harab 
Cordiy, Y. 
I'onil. A. 
Cano, Bell 
Cooper. Ueo. 
Cain, Levi 
Conner, Mary 
Uwlery, l.nJu 
Kv.iiiM, ilosr!tia L. 
l<Ulwa>d8, Henry L. 



.Mo Daniel, r«nole 
M('Kib»ien, Wrm. 
Max, A. 
Mvdien. R. T. 
MoKpe, Tno". 
Mitrr Ihiiii, Lena 
MMIlou, 1'. hi. 
Owaley, J. H. 
UweuH, B B. 
Price, Liula H. 
h'li'ice, i on» 
Peny, Wno. 
Pal k, HOKK 



The Postoffice Drug Store ! 

Yon ran alwa.vH find a chol«'«' line of 1>|{I'(;S at tlio Po.stofYlce 
nni>fStor«». AI.HoaHne line of Fancy Toilet ArticlcM, and tlio best 
Pcrfum<'rl»'H to lie foiiiid in MayHvillr. 

PreHuriptiuna a 8i>eciulty, and carefully compounded at all houra* 

POWER & REYNOLDS, 

Oox Building (Adjoining PostolBce). 

THIS SPACH IS RESERVED 



Fooniatn, Mrs. itolta Utexn. Heme 
J. <!() i KiK loll, Ueo. 

KalRer. Eslella KtUKUid, L. B. 

U<ilj|g<tr, Van .Hultun. MrH.Jalla 

Urnliuiii. Ueiile (2) hhIi, .ItrH-le 
•jhi riNoii, Mrs. Halle ^miumi, Mary 
Ho sle.v,.\tn» HauniUi , I'titrker, Aoue' 



HowiiriJ, (• rtlo 
Holioii. Jei I'V 
Hollldiiy, Jo-li 
Hopper. I 8. A. 
Harrlx. RlcbhrU 
HerrlUiS, U"o. 
Hlnew, A'. me 
He iv.-, ■\ II 'fCHoa 
Mealt-i , l.u 
JoUL'N. Ij iiayi"le 



I Pt-ai -...11, .>liw. Mar- 

Wii.ici-. liettle {2) I 
WliiiHi .. i. .1. (i) I 

Wlllsoil, AlllilUllB 
W'ellH. .litN. r. Z) { 

Whitley, Margaret C. : 
Weill, i.llv ' 
WllllM ns. .Muliie (c li ' 
lY'irk.JuiU (2) 

I'ACKAUHS. 

Hi> liil <y, .1 nUu I 
JoiinHOii. n. 
JMCka <n. W. J. 

Mm e: .\l . U 
I'ai k .'.I i-.s );■•: a 
Puller, .J-i.ii,e li. 
Peurce. Kiiiiiia ."iiuart 
Itl'-e. J cines 
llvaii, Kh 1'' K. 
liy li r. H. i.'i; Bio 
^^ p|. .Mr-i. .M .ry 
SiiiKlei.iri, AlUHii'ia 
■*lr.i-l) nieh. M >*. H .1. 
riio'iia-. Vir -. ,1 \V. 
V;.ilmi;l''>i I, W. It 
Va^.*, »irH .viary 



NELSON, 

«4THE HATTERS 

E. mom ST., MAYSVILLE. 



KroHi, Joliii ii. 
Un>d , .1. K. 
Urltuti , M n 
Comer, 'ripi<. 
Coulon I ><-ii II H 
4'ru\vt(>r<i <t suori, 
Crowe i.^c. AdiMii 
Deal, .Mrn. ( . H. 
Ulna- r, Meiiiy 
Dei. I, 1 n s 
D.)oley. Mr* A. 
Drii-coil. .vil8H Laellen 
Donovan, vi, J. 
Kver on, .VHmi Amy 
Ureeiileo, Lnia 
Urteiilee, Mary (2) 

Prinxjua oallinw lur itnv ut cli«i >iim>v. | 

will please sav h>ii-i'rti.s'-n 

TlIwMAS A I) WIS, I'. M. 

Death ol a Former Citizen of Mason 
Oovnty. > 

Dinl, HI St. L ni\H, .M l., >in itn 4 h inst., ; 
Mre. .M.iry K. bigerauu, lu tlitt 7Vtb year, 
of her age. j 

M r-<. ^iiietsou wsis tlu- yoiinue^t -Ihul;! ti-r 
of (JulonelJolin I'ickett, of tbia county.! 
She is remembered by her early friends [ 
as a woiii;i'i II' HI T' irii; (riiarrfcter, attractive 
manuerd and culiivaied mind. She was 
twioe married. Her flrat hnslMnd, Mr. 
Cliar'e-i F'lriiiMii, was '.< ii:itive of tliis 
county, and for many years ucoospienous 
dtisenof St. Louis. He died in 1890. 



Tlie Last Chance to Buy Stoves Ctieap. 

Allbongb the advance tn Iron haa increaiad tha priee of Btovea, w« will 
offer our entire large alooK of 

HEATERS AT COST. 



They iuu>l goto mxke room f^r other 
Improved (.wek at«v«iii and WraaahS I 



[oo(U. We Hie aiKO Khowinu tlie latest and beat 
Iteel avar offaied In Mnyavaia. 



BIERBOWERiSiOO. 



"ivr. 



The deceased's first wife wiis adiUi>h- 
ter of Mr. W. A. P. Lurtey, of Dover. 
Some time after bar death he married 
Misa Kate Goddard. Hia paranta rsaide 
near Murpbysville. 



Railway News. 

C. W.Smith has been appointed Travol- 
ing Passenger Agent of the 0. ft 0., with 
headqoarten at lodianapolis. 

Work was commenced Monday at 
at Versailles on the Ricbmond^Nicbolas- 
villa, Irirlna and Beattytrille road. 

December earnin^'s f jr the large num- 
of 170 roads show an aggregate of 
$56,238,084 againat$M,636.488:for Decem- 
ber, 1888. 

Tbe oontract for all of tbe work to be 
done on the Kentucky Midland Railroad 
in Bourbon Oonnty was let Saturday, to 
Chattanooga parties, and work will very 
likely ba commenced in a short time. 

It issarmlsed that railroad eonstmetion 
this year will riv.il tiiat of 18S7,wheii 
so many roads were projected and built. 
Roads are plaaned to open ap the Sooth- 
em States, and others are projected for 
Western and Northwestern States. If all 
these rosds are bsgaa this year tha rsanlt 
will be something stopendons, gays an 
ezchange^_ » ^ , 

BiTor Items. 
Tha swUt Utde M. P. Wells goss to Au- 
gusta Bomiog and afternoon. 

Tiie Bostona will remain in the Mem- 
phis trade until a new boat is secured to 
take the place of tha DaSota. 

The Scotia is laid up this week at Cin- 
cinnati, having her machinery repaired. 
She will resama her trips next Monday. 

Due up: Telegraph for Pomeroy and 

Louise for Charleston at midnight. Down: 
Rainbow at 4 p. in. ami Chancellor at 
midnight. 

To iMpraTa fht Big laady. 

Ooagressman Paynter has introduced 
a Mil to appropriate $136,140.81 to con- 
tlnna tha imprbrsment of tha Big 
Sandy river, to complete the dam and 
approaches to the look at Lonisa; $100,- 
000 to eoBstmet an additional look and 
$5,000 for clearing the forks of snags and 
other obstmctions. Ail to be expended 
during tha flaeal year aadiag Joaa 80, 
1881. 



Thomas Thoouoa Meats With Heavy 

Loss. 

There was a big tire late Monday even- 
ing oae mile east of Ripley, at the stock 
farm of Ttiomaa Thimpson, E<q. Two 
large barns, one of which contained 
thirteen bMd of boreee and a large 
amount of hay, Ac, and thejother contain- 
ing several thousand pounds of toliacco, 
were entirely destroyed. Two horses 
ware burned to death and several others 
bsrely escaped. Loia $1,600; no inanr- 
ance. 

Mr. Tliomaou is a son-in-law of Captain 
C. W. Boyd. He formerly res'dfd in this 
city and bis many friends here will r^ret 
to learn of bis heavy loss. 





-Dealers in- 



STOVES, 

Mantels, Grates, Tinware. 



TIN-KOOFI NG, 

OUTTERINO, 

and SPOUTEN'G. 

JOB WORE OF ALL KINDS EXEOHTED IN BEST MANNER 



PURE DRUGS, WINES AND LIQUORS. 




ABBB PBBN O HAT. 

Are yon spotted r 

Little boy.s HhouM not play with edge tools. 
Col. L. C. K«iaie led /or Cincinnati Toesday. 
Charietj uibaald. Of OlndnaaU, was tn (own 

HuuUay. 

MI88 Blauohe WllSOtt leaTSS sbOTtly for 

Pailucalj, Ky. 

coiiHiei Hiuimou'i raatleatad at heats aaa- 

diiy Htiil Moucluy. 

Mr. Hiiil .Ml". Ciliklsoii, ot ManclioKter, are 
tbe gu^NtH uf Mi'H. G.'s luotber, Mra.C, li. Case. 

George Jackson, a one-tliiie citizuii of Muyi*- 
vlUe, waa a regmleruii gueal at tbe baaille 
bare Tuetday. i 

Mlaa Oraoe KIrker, of ManebasUr, handled ! 
tbe wlreadurtug tbe abaenoe of tbe operator i 
Uuuday aud MouUay. I 



DRUG AND PRESCRIPTION 8T0BR 

o<m ARE NOW REGEIVIN6>> 



-OUR BTOCK OP- 



Kniiik siiiitii, 'igiitniuRmanlpnlator tor the 

Wt'.tit^i II lliiidii here, vlslteO US 
Mauclibtiler 8>klurtiuy. 



paieata at 



For a btaiter It waa adaudy. Town orowdad 
witii people aud atock. UeuiemlMr onr Block 
aalea— aeoond Hatarday In ovary monlb. 



a plain 
eniWies, 



■Squire Beasley and two amtebas was per< 

aniliuliitlni; oil Hip streetstbls Waek. li 

U. .M. lulu, iiio 'S'ltiire, by the aid of 
In alilu to he oul ii^ulii. 

Tiic wlif-wiirki IS woiiUl-he pi)llllolant 
(tbat ia wUan tUey aru lutareaied) were uoa* 
aoienom for tbatr abaaaae last elesUoa Oajr. 
Note tbto fut, will yon t 

Bnapandei— tbe seoond meat abop, from tbe 
aotlvlty of boalueaa atrife and turtuoU to tbe 
claaslo Bbadea of private retirement. It would 
be well tor aome of tbe wbllom Irlenda and 
pidronaot ibe booaa In Ita baloyon days to 
aiubie around tbe oonntarand llqnldate for 
the courlealea abown them. This woat be 
repealed la tbU shupe. 

Any of the caadKiatea who want to luforia 
their dearly beloved fellow-oltlsena bow lUey 
fought, bled and akedaddlad for tbelr coun- 
try "a good and are willing to aaorlfloe their 
futare bapplneaa lor a fat ofllce, with big aal- 
ary atlaobmeut, can do ao by wluklug at us 
■mall depoait. Now la your 

in 



and makinL 

. . lar 
and other amalt malten that are raqnlalta 



time. 8| 



king a 
ipedalt 



attention to parsonal pedt 



a rao« for ollloa. 

" la m.irrlaa* a failure t" la an o a- re pealed 
probUm. On one aide It am and ou tbe other 
■Idolt am not. Ah, er— wait till we gel our 
opUoa from beneath tbe abadea of a amall 
araa of arnloa ptaatan and gently araae itaa 
oreaaaa from ont onr l>aokt>one, oanaed by a 
violent oontaot with tbe aoft aide of a rolling 
pin, and perbapa, (eoho auawera perbapa), we 
oan alnofdata on tha qaaaUon la a more 
fatleaalmaar 



SPRING DRESS GOODS 



It will be found to contain nil tlie nawast weavoa Mid 
coloriiiKa; ulao u new Una of 



WMte Goods^Uneus aud EmMderies, 

wtaleh we are oftarlngat oar usual low ptioes. We also call atten- 
tion to the f oUowlng speolal Job : FIvo ♦b o ua^ u d yavds Indigo Flinti» 
abort lengths, at 0 cents par yard. 

BROWNING & CO. 



8 EAST gEOOND STBEEX. 



General tap News 

Cullmgs of th« Old World's 
ild Cabto Dlspatohss. ' 



THE JiJUPEROK'S LABOR FLAN. 



I OtiFM tor Ml* lateff ■! Mm- 

Ifcttii In th« Prcsant Labor TronblM. 
Tha BritlKh ParlUmcnt Opened— Other 
OaM* Item*. 

Bbbliiv, Feb. 13.— The North Ocrman 
(}aEett« says that Emperor Wflliam's 
reason fur confining Iuh initiol iDquiries 
relative to the labor question to France, 
England. Belgidia aiid Switzerland is 
tfiat the labor movcmsnti in thoM ooon- 
tii« resemble those in the Qermftn coal 
(lIstriftB. FHa tDaJosty, Tho(!a/rtte says, 
)8 making iuveBligatiuns into tlie labor 
conditions of other countries including 
Italy, Denmark and Sweden. 

Tvt Swiss goTemment has instructed 
its npresontatiTes to invite the countries 
to which they are accredited to take part 
iatiM labor conference to be held at 
Bsrae. This action on the part of 
Switzerland shows that Emperor Will- 
iam's proiK)Hals in regard toworkingmen 
have not led her to abandon her project 
for a conference at Bems. 

Parllumentary Bleetioa. * 

London, Feb. 12.— The parliamentary 
election in the Partriok di^ion of 
Lanarkshire, to fill the vacancy caused 
by the tlpath of Alex. Craig Sellar, 

Unionist. 1 1 ><)k v('.'>t('i-ilay, and re- 

hultt'd ill 111*' iciciiti in <il' tlic st'at by the 
Unionist*!, by 11 votw of J.Ui for Mr. 
Parker Sinitli, 10 o.UJU fur Sir Ciiarles 
Tiluuuit, Qlads tonian. 

I*ariielUt«« UrBunizi-. 
LOWDOV, Fob. r?.— Tho I'arnfllite 
members i f tln' lionse of roninioiis met 
yesterday I'vcnin., and i ln Ud .Mr. I'ar- 
nell (.'hairinaii. I.V'soliitimi.-i Wfrc iiiiaiii- 
inoujily |i;iN-.cil i full (•(miidt-nt'e 

in Mr. I'ar/u'il, and In*]'*' Ibat liif pres- 
ont session of parliament would bring 
nearer the legislative indepcndeno* w 
Iceland. 

Sfoj>p«>d l»y the Govern iiifMif. 

LlSBO.N, Feb. I'.'.— A patriotic in.'oting 
which Wi!s t(j bavc been held at the Coli- 
seum, and a i»roposed patriotic proces- 
sion througli thti streets of the city have 
both been forbidden in a proolamatkm 
issued by the government. 

Touchy About lliit I'lcture. 
Bbrun, Feb. 12.— Emperor William 
has caused anoixlerto be issued prohiUt- 
ing tlie exhibition of portraits of him- 
ssgi his anoMton or any of his familjr 
wttoot his sanction ntst b*ing 00- 

A Royal Decree. 

Lisbon, Feb. 12.— -A royal decree has 
hsen signed authorising the completion 
of the defences of lisbosi, a thorough 
Mocganization of the army aad tha pur^ 
chase of eight ships of war. 

lieati Zalin>kl Secures • 0*>Sra«t> 

London, Feb. 19.— The fovemment 
has arranged with Lieut. Zalinski to 
superintend the construction at Wool- 
wwh of tlfty dynamite guud,. of which 
Zalinski is the i nvantor. 

will Roon Be aCnrtlinal. 

Paris, Feb. 12.— Monsij^'uor Kotelle, 
papal nnneiu at I'aris, will ahortly ba 
elevated to Ibu cardinalate. 

Foreiga Note*. 

Count Andraaiy has an internal cancer. 

Wcatphaliaa miners want one of their body 
in the kaiser's work. 

CgoAt Tolstoi, the 
isfet is dangerously ilL 

Birmingham, England, striUag tin worit- 
cn have rssimied work. 

It il reported in BniBwls tliat tha OOflEss 
harvest in Java will be bad. 

European sovereigns have most all con- 
doled with the pope upon Pecci's death. 

The pope has decorated the Shah of FSnla 
for his kindness to Cathollo missioaariaa 

Benson, the man who was arrested at Nice 
for fraudulent praotioss, lias been rslsassd 
from custody. 

Mrs. William Walter Phelps, wife of the 
Amerirmu milliliter to Qermany, was pr^ 
sented ou SaturdajT to ths Oawsgsr liiipissi 
Frederick. 

The Emperor William has prohibited the 
pabllo exhibition of portraits of himself, or 
ol those of bis anosstofs without the im* 
perial sanction. 

Documents have been seised which eon- 
tain the uaine^ uf tliu tMii>]i:rHt(jrs who bad 
been depiitiil til kill Muj. I'unitzu, whether 
his Cous|i;!acv was or was w>l ii success. 

Franco declines the iiiviiatiou of Ger- 
many to (iM intt inat idiml labor congress. 
Bhu has already accepted the Uwiss invita- 
tion to a labor conference to be held in }*Cay. 

Herr Roth has informed the Swiss bunds*- 
rath that an interview with tiie Bmperor of 
Oermany resulted in an agreement to com- 
bine the ^witis and the Qerman labor confer- 
ences hito (I sintjle conference. 

Prince Fcr lin tnd U changing all tlio chief 
comniaadcrs in the Bulgarian urniy. Numer- 
ous arri'st^ have boen niado ia the Bulgarian 
towns oa till' Danube of plotters" (-oaimit- 
tees involved ia the attempt on Fttrdiuaud's 
lifSu 

A TERRIFI C COW HIDINQ 

Olvea Charles O'Brien, a at. Loulslan, Bjr 
■Is Snraaed Wife. 

St. Lot is, Feb. 12. riiarle.H O'Brien, 
ofabiKbodcr making firm here, was 
cowhidi (I l)y hi.s wife in the criminal 
court njom Monday. They were mar* 
ried Bi.\ yeai.s uuu, eloping from Cape 
Girardeau, Mo. Ther separated about a 
^ear ago, and have sued their domestic 
troubles in court He capped the climax 
by cliarjfin^ her withlewdand lascivious 
conduct, and luid her arrested. The cose 
has been called many times, but contin- 
ued owing to absenso of wiine^soH. It 
was called l^Ionday, and Judge Campbell 
threw it oni of tourl. 

The husband and wifo met at the court 
room door, and hIic pulled acowbideand 
went for bim. Sim struck him fully 
twenty linies, ev, r> blowdrawinv; blctod.. 
She wHH (iiially overiHJWtied, and tha 

Judge lined lier J^jO for coi. tempt, but 
»ter the dn^ was remitted. The scene 
waa a vaify sensationw ant. 



WIO T IN CANA DA. 

Ob* niMMsma Pfttrnh Catholics Attaek a 
aaiall Maad of Pr«t«staate. 

Ottawa, Ont., Feb. It.— Last night 

the city of Hull, a<"ross the Ottawa river, 
from here, was th»> 8<'ene of one of the 
most disgraceful riot^ ever cbrouicled in 
Canada. A small band uf Protestant 
evangelists from Ottawa were attacked 
b^ a howling mob of nearly 1,000 
French Canadians who were armed with 
revolvers, shotgtus, stioks and stonss. 
Five persona wera wounded, three eari- 
ously. 

It appeal* that tiia avangallsts, some 

twenty in number, tnohiding four or five 
ladies, some time ago announced ttiat 
they would hold eTangaHoal servioes in 

Hull, which is inhabited almost entirely 

by French Koman (^'atholics. They were 
warned that serious trouble would re- 
sult, but in spite of the warning visited 
that ci y yesterdaj^ evening; and began 
reliRioiis scr\ iccH m a small mission hall. 
In Htioflier portion of the city a crowd 
of the ronj^ln st chara<'ter8of tbe city con- 
gregated and marclied through the 
streets, armed w itb pistols and revolvers, 
shotguns and all kinds of missiles. The 
crowd increased in numbers with great 
rapidity until tiiey reached the street in 
front of the mission hall, where over a 
thousand of tho infuriated crowd hung 
about the building, swearing vengeance 
on the little band inside. The police were 
powerless to disperse the mob. The 
mayor and two aldermen, who tried to 
disperse the crowd, were stoned aad 
severely injured. 

The appearance of one of the evangel- 
ists at a window was the signal for a 
shower of stones. Doors and windows 
were demolished and the howling mob 
rushed in. firing their revolvers ris they 
went. .Six of tho evangeli.sts, including 
two ladies, were si'riously if not fatally 
in jured. Tlie rem linder esi'apcd tlirongh 
a back window and beat a hasty retreat 
to Ottawa. 

The outrage lias cr(\ated tnunendous 
excilemi'iit lu n^ and tli« pronipt action 
of the police alone pre\ eiitcd an armed 
force of I'loiestant citi/.ens of this city 
from wreaking vengeance on the lYMUiu 
Canadians. • 

The matter will be brought up in par- 
liament to-day. 

The militia hare (nders to turn out at 
a moment's notice to prevent further 
trouble. 



CONDENSED TELEGRAMS. 

Micor Events and Little HuppeningM at 
Vurluui Places. ' 

A flint glass trust is proposed. 

The Canadian exodus nsolution was de- 
feated. 

Gleorge J. Rotlauf was bound r)\ er yester- 
day, at Cincinnati, for forgery. 

Representative Ulair, of Adams county, 
O., is convalescent. 

A saloon was blown up with dynamite at 
Fairlaad, Ind. 

JteMs a Claarjr trisd to kffll Usteadly 

near OoIwnMa, 8. C. 

Thu jury in tla> Bsfl anUFdMT tvlal at 

Blooiniiii^'ton, Ind., disagreed. 

H. H. Shiink.s was arrested at 
charged with onniterfeitiug. 

Buford Ii. Sanip!>ua fell from a trssUs at 
BhclbyviUe, Kjr., and was kiUed. 

Several busineas honsss ware dastroynd by 
fire at Huntington, W. Va. Loes, (T.'i.ooo. 

Two men, on their way to the peniten- 
tiary, escaped from the AsrlSat NewossUe, 
Indiana. 

Governor Hovey, of Indiana, argued the 
service pei.sion bill before the house conuait* 
tee yesterday. 

Rflmarklng, "This is the way to seaie 
burglars," Susie Thompson, of Oameron, 
Ma, pointed a revolver at Allie EUis, aged 
18. Allie fen to the floor dead Susie has 
lost her reason. 

The murder trial of Seth Twombly, en- 
gineer, Henry La Cloche, fireman, and 
Charles Bul'onl, coiuluctor, was t»egun at 
Chicago Monday. The dcfeudaiits composed 
the crew of the Rock Island froigbt train 
that ran into a ptutwuf^cr car, on the Wash- 
ington Height* branch of the road, on the 
of Sept. 3S. 



rowanrly and the lAka Seamen. 

Chicaoo, Feb. 12. A morning paper 
says: As Mr. Powderly has promised 
the Seamen's 1 )istrict ati.sambly to place 
a lecturer at all tlie leading ports on the 
lakes, if the seamen would remain in the 
Knights of Lalx>r. it hba been decided 
not W seoede Just now. 

A liniik KiutiitrraHKe<i. 

Benton- H.vkbok, Mich., Feb. I'J.— The 
bank of I'errien Springs, Reeves, Patterson 
& ('om;)any, nroprietors, closed its doors 
vesterdav. The liabilitiea are about 
$2U,U(Xi. rt in understood the firm he- 
came involved by baoUng ttie St. Jos^lh 
Valley railroad. 

C«>lliery CloHfd Indefliiltoly. 
A8Hr.AND, Pa., Feb. 13.— Five hun- 
dred men and boys v^nre thrown out of 
employment Tuesday morning by the 
closing of the Philadelphia and Reading 
company's North Ashland colliery. The 
colliery ha s been shut down in deiinitaly. 

Tlie I.eunieil Darber's Fate. 

Inuianai'olis, Feb. i:^.— Manuel J. 
Vieira, the learned barber, is dead of in- 
juries received by colliaion with an en- 
gine on the Union railway tracks. Ha 
was a Portuguese, and came here twen- 
ty years ago. He could talk inteUi> 
aantlyand easily hi twenty different 
unguagee and dialects, and was special- 
ly conversant with Spanish and kindred 
tcmgues. Vieira was a leading member 
of the local society of BpiritualistB, aad 
believed firmly themin. 

I>*atli ttf m Promjaeat tewyer. 

Columbus, O., Feb. 18.— ChauBOey N. 
Olds, a prominent Columtma lawyer, 
and attorney for the Pan-Handle rail- 
road for the pn.st twenty years, died here 
yesterday, a;,'cd 74. lie was appointed 
attorney general by Governor Brough, 
and was OIK (• representative to tho gen- 
eral asaufubly Horn Pickaway C4>uuty. 

"The HiinKarlan King" Killed. 

Wu-KKSii.MtHi:, Pa.. Feb. 13.— JohS 
KtJsseck, the Ro-cailed "Uungariaa 
King," was instantly killed .Monday 
night by boiug thrown from his buggy 
while drivin g in thia city. 

An 01<l .Uaiil's Terrible Fate. 

FiTCHUiiuf), Ma«i., Feb. 13.— Sunday 
night a hou.- o <)ccn[iied by Miss Caro 
liuo I'&ne, ia Luneabiirg, was burned. 
Miss Laaa, wlw it 10 yetM old, wm' 
ished. 



RETAIL MARKET. 



IX)KFKE. per pound Wa'i ' 

MOLAM^'K^— new crop, per k*! —■ 00(^nf) 

Unldeii Hyrui* •••••• eeeeeeee* ••«••• 

^orghuni, lan'^y new...«.«.......M.M. 8MNo 

HUUAK-Yellow. per poaad.. 6|i7 

Ex ra C, per ponnu 7 

A, per pound H 

UranuiMied, per pound.. 

powdered, per poaod !ii 

^ew Urlexns, per poand.. 6®? 

TEAti— per pound ."iO^lui 

CUAL UlL.-HeH(Ulghi. per gHllou.... 16 

BAt UN— BreHklaMt, p<>r pouud........ MJ 

Clear sidps, per pound j, 79H 

Hamn, per ponnd ^ I8(!^i4 

Hbonld«>rB, per pouml.. 7(4H 

BBANs— Per gallon 8U(U40 

BUTTKB— Per pound Vi&'Ju 

t HK KF.NH-Eiicli n&HO 

KOtJH-PerdoB^n „. J0§l3 

KLOUIt— LlmHHfotie, per ijHrrel lo 60 

Oi l Ocild. ptr bHrrel f> 60 

MayHville Kancy, per barrel......... 4 76 

Mrrod I ouuty, per barrel: 4 75 

KoyHl Patent, per barrel 4 60 

Mnysvllle Fflmliy, per barrel 8 tO 

Oranaiu, per Rack.. tiO&iU 

HO^EY-Per pouud„.«««...... „. 20 

HiiMINY-Per ■alloa.....«««.,.M.«M. )A 

VH'A i.-P»rpaAfc , , ^ J6 

LAKIV— Per po . nd «(alu 

ONIONS— Per peck new «}(aSil 

PUTATOEH- Per peck, new 10 

APPLE8— Per peck, new 40(<|fO 



JNPRECEDENTEO ATTRACTION i 
OVER A MILLION DISTRIBUTED! 



mrLOU/SIAMA STATE LOTTERY COMPMHY. 

S^.iicorporxted by the Legtnlatnre foi ed- 

ucatlnnnl and clinrliHble purposes, and It; 
rauotilne made h part of the preMenl Hiatf 
onstlliil lOii, in 1S579, by an overwhelming 
.KipulHr vote. 

SVITN MAMWOTH D (AWIMON talre 
,>iaoe seml-aunualiy, (June and I>Meinber), 
4rid Its Grand Mingle Nomber Drawlngf 

take pince to ench of the other ten nontbs of 
the year, and are all drawn In poMlO, at thf 

\< iiileiii v 01 MmnIc. New Orleanii, I>a. 

Famed For Twenty Years, 

(or line;;! It. v 0 1 lis it ra wIiil'h aad prompt pay- 
ment o! priz.eM, atlt Rlcd »s loHowB : 

" H> (Id hrr/hi/ <•/ rli/i/ I hat vc supervise (he 
arranyemenU /or all the Atonlhlj^ and Semi-an- 
nual Drawingi 0/ 7'A« LoHiaiana StaU IMtery 
Vompanfi, and in person manage and eontrof the 
drawmgn Ihrmirh rH, and Ihnt thr xfitne art- r<>n- 
dutltid Hilh tHini.ily, fiiii iiis.i, ixnil in yood fdiih 
toward all partiei, and we authorize the company 
to MS* thU MrU/UiUe, vrtth fae timUn nfour *ig- 
naturet tUUiehed, In U» advertUtmenU?' 




CommlHaionera. 

We tht underHgned Bamk* and Bankeri uHU 
pay all J'riMe$ drown in J He LouiHana State Lot- 
leriet which map be pretented at our eounten : 
R. M. WALMHLRY.Pres. LoaUlana Nat.Bk. 
PIEKRE LANAl^X. Pre>^. Ht»te Natl(,nnl f^k. 
A. BALDWIN, Frew. New Orle»n« Nat. Biuik. 
UARL KOHN, PreNldtiil I'nion Nafl Bank. 

GRAND .MONTHLY DKAW1N«, at the 
Acadetnv ol MuKtc.New Orleans, 'lUEHDAY, 
MARCH 11, It-UU. 

CAPITAL PRIZE, $300,000 

ieo,WJUUekcUaiftiO«aoti: tialvcs,|lU; Uuar- 
i«is. N; Tmtba. lit Tweattaths, H. 

xjar or pataae. 

1 PRIZE of 131)0,000 ««„r,.,.„ 

1 PRIZE of m,m is....».M~.....>.. ioo,uo( 

I PRIZE of 60,IX« 18 SO.OO 

1 PRIZE of iS.uO Is ., iS.iM 

2 PRlZhM of lO.uao are.«. au.ool 

5 PRIZEH of 6,oeu ar* ................. Si,iU 

25 PRIZEH ol l.tKXI 2%UOi 

100 PRIZICH of 600 are e-i.t^f 

2(X) PRIZEH of 800 are flU,000 

&iiO PRIZEH ol 3ju are .................. luu.uu 

APpaoxiKAHoir wmmm, 

160 Prtsss Of 1600 are.................. t 6 >,<) i 

luo Prlass ot aw are m,mi 

100 Prlles Ot 900 are. • e e • eeeeee • • e ...... 20,VU 

TERMINAL FBISaS. 

m PriEefi of 1100 are. 99,060 

9U9 Prises of lOU are.......^........... ......... 90,9 0 

i,ldi Priee* amonntlog to ,, ifljfllt^l"' 

NoTK.-Tickets drawing capital prlsss are 

riot entitled to terminal prises. 

AGENTSWAJJTED. 

For Club Rates, or any further Informattoo 

detilred, writ* legibly to tlie underslgnect, 
clearly stailDf your re<>ldence. witn Biate, 
County, Htreef and Number. More rapid re- 
tarn mall delivery will be assured by your 
eseloslDg an envelope t>earlng your full ad- 
dress. 

IMPORTABTT-Address M.A.DAUPHIN, 
New Orleans, Lia., or M..\.DAUPHIN, Waab- 
IngtoD, D. C, by ordinary letter, oonialnlng 
money order Issued by all Express oompanlee. 
New York Exchange, Draft or postal note. 

Address registered letters coDtalning cur- 
rency to New Orleans National Bank, New 
Orlean*. La. 

•a-'MIUMSMBER, that the payment ol 
Prises isgnaranteed by tour National Banks 
ot New Orleans, and tne tickeu are signed by 
the Prefildeiit of an Institution, wkoxe cnar- 
lered riKlitH are recognized In the blK)iet«t 
courts ; ttierefore beware of all Imitations or 
inonvmous soliemes." 

4»NE DOM.AR Is the price of the smallest 
psrt or fraction of a ticket ISHued by ns In any 
(rawing. Anytbinein our name oflSntf tor 
less tliau a dollar la a swindle. 

FISBI nSI! FISHI 



WE QUOTE YOU 

No. 2 Mackerel, In buckets. tl 85 

No. 1 Family Wlitte KiHb, In buckeiN 56 

Large Mackerel, p»r pleo«>. 10 

Put e Cream Cod Flab (bOB*t«st) p*r lb. a'A 

Fine t-Hlmon, per oan, only......... lit 

Flnext Kaiiuon per oao 17J<J 

Lmije caiiM i)f Nfaokerel, piT o^n 10 

Three cans large Mostard Hardlues. 

Voat cans Oil Bardiass. oolfm^.^^^ 86 

Two eans finest Imnorted HirMnea^..... 26 



PICKL[S! PICKLES! PICKLES! 



We BtlU bave a few more of tbo»e fine Pick- 
Isstott Only ttasws per baadnd. 



H1LL_&CQ. 

Porpoise Leatberl 

This Rhoelsmadeof PORPOISB8KIN, tan- 
red III blubber oil, making It pliable and Hofi. 
It Is iinperviouH to inolnture, aslthus ueltlier 
hair callN nor sweat glands. loserted between 
tbe opper and llnlnx, and between tbe Inner 
and outer sales Is a fine rubber lining. lo ad- 
dition to tlie stock lieliin wHter proof, the rub- 
ber liiiliK leiKltiH ihe Minn inipei'vloiiN to 
moifcture or dainpueti". It is acknowledged 
to be tbe toughest leather manotaetafSd. In 
Bals and Congress. For sal* at 

LYNCH'S, 

41 MARKET fVT. 
Msnafastawd b/ & B. RKYNOLDu. 



A TEBBinC SUDGETER IN PRICES I 



THE BALANCE OF THIS MONTH TO BE 
MEMORABLiE AT 



3MC 




J 




SPOT CASH DRY GOODS HOUSE. 



All Dress Goods Cut Right and Left! 

LowMt Figiur#i Ever Known on Oloaki. 



We will Hvll 1,000 yards I^adlos' Doiiblo Width Dr<\ss Goods at 
25 cents por yard, worth froin50cts. to.$1.00; 1,000 yards Plaid 
Flannels at 25 venta. worth ffO centa ; ffOO sards Elder Down Flan- 
nel at 25 cents, wortli 0O to Tff Mnta ; 1,000 yardt Wool Jeana at 25 
centa, worth 35* 

We have marked down every pair Wool Hoae tn our honae at mln- 
ona low prices, and on account of the mild weather I will close out 
all my Comforts, Blankets, Winter Undwwear and Men's fWinter 
Gloves at cost. My Cloaks I will close ont at half price. This is no 
blow; it is a fact. I want everybody to come and gi:t the (grandest 
bargain «f their life. 

M. B. McKRELL, 

20 STJOTTOlsr ST. 



AHENTION, FARMERS! 

Save ronr faorses and money by using the 

Blair Separable Collar. 

TblK CnUnr Is rpcunl at tlie bottom, and roninmnds the 
att( ntion ni cviry cor.i-un.rr upon tli« tollowlng facts: 
Flr>l-Jt prevents l>u(il{|iig the (.'nllnr at the throat. 

Herond— It Hvolds ilie i« niovlMi ol i-weal-inds from 
the CorlHr. 

llilrd-Ttie Bdvnntflnen ot putting on a l oIlHr with 
tliiN iHKtener, tn cases where tbe hotfessre tionblcsone. 
Is very (jreat. As lor RtrerRih, It Idflmply pptfect. Come 

HI (I t x>.nilne It. It Ik h tlist-olflss, nil-wool Uij., :ind (be 
(.'!(<■ IS ilie Ki nie im an orillriBij < ollai.' F vi rv ( oUar 
wm rtiiitdt Hud sHtls;acllou Kuaianlx d. For side by 

GEO. SGHROEDER, 

Otaltr In Haratn and Saddltt. 

Alfull line 0fC61]arS|^nws,Cbalns,*e.,at lovpft price. 





sprt^Sijjsi^i'siiSiSSTs.ryiSKSJS^^ ««« w. sii 0-r isst 

Good Papers, 4o.; White Blanks, 5c.; Gilts, 6c. 

We have tb* laiasst stoek in tb* ettr to s*l*et ftoia. 

GREENWOOD'S PAINT STORE. 



NEW GOODS I 



I desire to Inform tbe public thnt my stock 
of MILLINERY UUOD- and NOTIUMH Is 
complete and •mbtaoeii every ttatns osaaUjr 
tound tn a flist-clssM slor*. ify Stow M 

Holiday Uoodt* In very flu*. 

A Flue Line of 

DOLLS 

For the LitUe Folks. 

Also Agent for the Old 8tat*n Hand Oy** 

Ing establishment. 

MII8S LOU FOWLING, 

Beoond m., next door to Wblle, Jodd A Co.'s. 



Having rented my hiime, I will sell at pub- 
lic auction, on Hit- pieinlses opvioHlte Mar- 
shall Htatiou, Masou i oiinty, Ky., on 

Thursday, Feb. 27th, 

ISW, at 1 p. m., (b* following property, viz: 
Une hoTHe, one yearling belter, three Jersey 
0OW8, (t«ko of them giving milk, onelretih and 
one will be rrei^h in six weeks); a fine lot nf 
baron ; also Imusehold and kltclien lurniiure 
and a line librury. 

Six uiQUthH' CI edit will l>e given on all sumii 
of K end over ; under ibal, easb. 

iSdltAwlt 0. KEYEM. 



A Liberal Offer. 



OmcB orraa Suzni or DATM Cft> 

Nkw Orlxahb, La. J 
[NorthernlBraBoh, Cleveland, O.] 
We hereby agree to forfeit One Hundred 
DoUsisdiOQIoraajrssstot bsMtosl 
pntlsB. dysysp*!** UUbosnssiiswi ' 
orpilSSthatWslr of Dates will not cure. 

ELIXIR OP DATES CO. 
IFor sale by J. J. Wood, Wbelesale and Be* 
all Dragglst.1 spM 



U, DBWirr C. FBABKUH, 



Dentist, 




.N^OTICB Is hereby given tbat 1 bave been 
antborlsed by tb* legal b*ln of tb* *s> 
tat* of Haaey Oarp*ttt*r, dcosassd, to s*ttl* 

the buHlneHs of said estate. All persons hav- 
ing claims agaiuHt Haid etilate will present 
tbem to me for payment; those ladebted will 
pay tb* sau* to as*, an4 by saM avtbttrlty 1 
wUl sell a bonssand lot In tb* town of Abw- 
deen, Brown County, 0., tbe late residence of 
tbe said Nancy Carpenter, deceased, at pri- 
vate vale. Terics of uale will be made known 
by ealUng on J. B. CARFCNTBB, tb* nndSr- 
Hlgn*d, MayivUto, Ky. fMUt 



£^ w. BAhmmArm, 

Attorney and Counselor at Law 

Practloea In tbe Courts of Masou 'and ad- 
lonlna eonntlss. i^rompt atientloo paid lo 
aoHeeiions. 

MlilN ONLY! 



mm 



Office: ^ntton 
door t.) i'owfoHIos. 



T. H. nr. saaxTzi, 

Next lo Bank of llayevllle. 

Oas given In the i>alnleNN extraction of tnstll. 

~" T. J. CUBU3Y,~ 

Sanitary Plumber 

SAS AVD STEAM FITTEB. 

Artlstlo VlwBdellera. Oil I.aiiip*. Bte. 
■*eond stMst, opposlt* Mat* National Bank. 



QIORQB W. OOOK, 

HooflSb ntgn and Omamental 

Mnter and Paver-Eaiuror. 

Mum nortb sM* of Poonb stMS*. bsMran 
ItlasMion* and Markat. MaysTlUa^VWUy 



C. W. WARDLE, 

DENTIST, 

ZWEIGART'S dLOCK. 



For LOST or FAIUNO XANHOOD, 
UeneralandKi:KV0U8D£B£UTY; 
WeaJineiior Body and lIinrl,Effeott 
lofKrrorior Exoeaset in Older Yoiuig, 

Hiibu.l, Nolilr ■tMKMIII fullr H n il. How loi'lilarn tai 

Slr.nl|(hraWKAK,tMli:V».LU|-|'IM>lllljlNS*l-AHTI«UKn«DY. 
ibMlul.lT uarmiln* HUSK TI(KA'I^I':M..||rni':i'. In . il>r. 
■•B iMlliy fl*0lu t»U Htalp. .liil l<'.r.>lKii I oiitilrl. (. Ib.iu. 

lleMrlpll.P Hook, riblna.tl.a .ntl LiroofW muiU .1 i : tiMil i Frt.. 

i44r«MEKIE PeOIOALCO., BUFFALU.N. Y. 



T. J. MORAN, 



Oas and .'^teain Klttliit;. Work done at reas. 
outtlile rati s. llt'iiiiiiiiiirterM on West side o* 
Market, above 'I'blrd. Ksih roomsa srct iiiltv 




and Whlak«>T It ah* 

• tecaredur I. i Mwltb 
ontpalo. 1l<'tii< of par. 
t euln I V 1,1. PilEB. 
iMnul) Al.V.OOi.UEir, HA 

VSkOBsstfM WhMsiuril Ifc 



7STO gaao A ■OHTn can he made work- 
ing for us. Agents prefer] > >' who can fur- 
nish a horse and give tiieir wliole lime tn the 
business. Mpare moments may be profitably 
employed also. A few vacancies in towns 
andeltlsn. B. F. JOHNHUN A CO., lOW Mala 
Hu, Blebmead, Va. Jf. H.—rieattatateaae and 
buiiMMtommrimet. If ever mlml atmi m m ug